Go to establishedtitles.com/CAPTURED10 and help support the channel. They are now running a massive Early Black Friday Sale, plus 10% off on any purchase with code CAPTURED10. Thanks to Established Titles for sponsoring this video! Let me know your top 10 fantasy worlds of all time!
@jchinckley Жыл бұрын
Established titles is a scam... if you hadn't already heard. It is a lie from a company based in Hong Kong. There is at least one KZbin channel that reported on this.
@Myah_W Жыл бұрын
Hey what soundtrack do you use for your video intro. Love your content.
@Jadepulse-fx9jj4 ай бұрын
Wait what about ONE PIECE?!
@NehnBellanaris3 ай бұрын
@CapturedInWords Ok, so one thing that I'm not sure you know, but Professor Tolkien called the world that he created his Legendarium. And second, I was just wondering if you ever read The Inheritance Cycle by Christopher Paolini. He did a pretty good job at world building in it. Personally, I think he could have done a better job of writing them, but still enjoyable all the same.
@qbaczek1233 ай бұрын
Being it scam (would be sad and a bit of lack of proofing on your end) or not - a great ad you've done, love it :D
@julianmeza80612 жыл бұрын
The Lord of the Ring is the first epic fantasy I ever read. It is such an incredible story and every time I picked it up to read I felt like I was there in middle earth, it felt comfortable because Tolkien helped me understand his world so deeply.
@Wolltazar Жыл бұрын
well considering that Middle earth was Tolkien's lifetime work (the world itself, not counting stories which are great too because of their power to suck the reader into the world just as you say), it has to be one of the best worlds
@Emanon...5 ай бұрын
It's a bit bloated tbh. Not every fucking hill and stream needs a detailed description and story. It's not a dig at the world-building, that's unrivalled, but the trilogy could've used a proper editor with all the side-stories, songs and tangents...
@Theodre_Verany4 ай бұрын
@@Emanon... Remind me again when every hill and stream has a detailed description and story? Tolkien describes things in enough detail to make it feel realistic but not to the point of excess. The magic of Tolkiens world is getting lost in the lore so I totally disagree about him editing out all the wonderful side stories, songs and tangents. Makes the whole thing feel much larger and realistic
@platinumbrickproductions83193 ай бұрын
@@Theodre_Verany it's a dumb hot take that people think they can adopt, when they've obviously never experienced real overly detailed literature. It is a cope, usually for a poor reading ability or a short attention span.
@samm81902 жыл бұрын
I agree with Tolkien as #1. Personally I think one of his best stories is The Children of Hurin. It feels like a real ancient tragedy like Beowulf or Gilgamesh.
@Yesica19932 жыл бұрын
Saddest, most depressing thing I've ever read. I went into it knowing it wouldn't be like LOTR. I expected some darkness. But yegads, I didn't realize it was going to be like that!
@Bt-cq6te2 жыл бұрын
im gonna have to diagree with tolkien as #1, its more nuanced than wot but wot feel more immersive to me, and much more relatable than tolkeins.
@saulcervantes19752 жыл бұрын
@@Bt-cq6te The thing with Middle-earth that no other fantasy series has is that it is often treated as an actual historical document. Tolkien wrote many versions of each story and so you'll have people discussing "Well, according to this source, orcs are corrupted elves." But that's not always the case. These discussions feel similar to those historians have when interpreting old documents. Add to that the several constructed languages that Tolkien invented that have been expanded with their own rules and grammar, and now Middle-earth takes shape as a location and less a fantasy world. Even WoT, as massive as that world is....we still know what happened, and how, and why. It's a linear history that, while very deep, remains linear for the most part.
@suzettehopkins5734 Жыл бұрын
Of course Tolkien and CS Lewis but I also love Shannarra- the third series I read.
@KootFloris Жыл бұрын
Indeed, the fact that Tolkien of all people feels cliché, says a lot about his influence. He has become common knowledge in fantasy world design, and most others are but variations with a personal spin.
@eddieford93734 ай бұрын
You gotta try the Elder Scrolls series. The early games are weird, and the world of tamriel is one of the best.
@FauxReal.3 ай бұрын
cant believe it wasnt even on the top 10 list
@Mancub20243 ай бұрын
Nirn is a world so deep with lore and abstract fantasy concepts, it completely transcends the video framework in which it derives. The amount of in-game books detailing lore, plot development and world building, within Skyrim alone adds up to 316,000 words. That's a fairly thick book in its own right, and that doesn't even include the dialogue and experiential elements. Morrowind alone is worthy of mention on this list. The difficulty of the ES world is that one really needs to engage deeply with the games to fully tackle it.
@guifire97473 ай бұрын
While i agree, i would still advise the continent of Zemuria from the Kiseki (Legend of Heroes) series, the world building is of the chart, the 13th games was announced (and each of the games are 50-70hours long for the early ones, more than 130 hours for the latter ones), country, politics, magic, technology, devil, religion, parallel dimension, mercenaries, terrorisme, curse, cult so evil that even big criminal/terrorist organisation attack them on sight, tragedy, history, there is everything in there, if someone love world-building as much as i am, he's gonna have a blast playing those (and as i said earlier, all the games combined must be more than 1500 hours of fun exploring), one of the most underrated series i played
@wenterinfaer16563 ай бұрын
The asshole didn't even mention it. I disliked it, you should too
@Regarded692 ай бұрын
@@Mancub2024 Agreed, TES can get really metaphysical and deep. For instance a oversimplified summary of the main villain of Morrowind Dagoth Ur is that he achieved a higher level of understanding of the nature of existance, wich is basically that all of reality including the physical world and the gods exist inside a sort of ''dream'' inside of a being called the Godhead. And while most that fully achieve this understanding cannot rationalize their existance any more and therefore seize to exist, Dagoth Ur was deluded into thinking that rather than him being a ''dream'' of the Godhead, he was the Godhead and everything in existance was his dream, basically he thought he was the God of all of existance and was therefore entitled to everyones worship. But really he was just a experience of the Godhead like everyone and everything else. The history, religion and time itself can get really weirdly complex, like the gods may experience time in different directions and several contradictionary timelines can be true at the same time an so on. A writer at Bethesda had a degree in comparative religion I believe and he had a lot of influence on the lore.
@evanpeiffer24952 жыл бұрын
I’m glad you mentioned Narnia, which is nostalgic for me, because it would be nice to explore a land that the chances of survival are much greater.
@gholamdapantaloonsniffer82182 жыл бұрын
Until you hop on a boat, then you're bound to end up turned to stone, turned to a dragon or just go past the edge of the world
@novy11982 ай бұрын
People tend to forget what Tolkien did, he wrote insane books, insane story, with maps, LANGUAGES, he "invented" races that are used still in nowadays films, insanely written history, characters, details. Thats a lifetime work and it really shows
@RealCodreX2 ай бұрын
However the books and its characters were rather flat (even back then but esspecially nowerdays), the maps are flawed (not just from a story biased view) and only the languages and the sheer amount of history (not its quality, that is where you want people like Sanderson or Martin) made the franchise what it is. People who look back at Tolkien do mostly so because he was the first fantasy author that became really big and succesfull, or because they adore his linguistic skills. Then there are also those who watched the movies first and expect the books to be equally action driven. And while Middle Earth still stands above other franchises because of its languages, it has been surpassed in terms of quality storytelling, character developement, mapping and maybe even history. It is, however, still one of the most influencial works within modern fiction, for better or for worse.
@unbreonblade5904Ай бұрын
@@RealCodreX You are forgetting that Tolkien did all that in a time in history where no one had ever made such an extensive world-building work before.
@arkhamknight9001Ай бұрын
There's a reason why he's regarded as the Father of Modern Fantasy.
@neutral_narrАй бұрын
@@RealCodreX subjective
@thomasalvarez6456Ай бұрын
@@RealCodreXbad bait
@fantasyfanatic60382 жыл бұрын
Not the first time I say this but I have to reiterate: Jay is truly unrivaled in the BookTube community. Your style of editing never ceases to amaze me! It's simply gorgeous and beautiful to watch. Your videos have the right balance of humor and insightful thoughts and are simply a treat to watch! Thank you Jay for the consistently amazing content!
@Upwardfanatic14 Жыл бұрын
I’ve only just come across booktubing and I couldn’t agree more
@adamnesico Жыл бұрын
I still miss the geek furioso. He was both booktuber and comedian. I laughed so much while he roasted YA fantasy with good and funny editing.
@gregsquires62012 жыл бұрын
Middle Earth is always a strong choice for #1. It's literally the world that all other fantasy worlds are compared to. It may not be your favorite, but it's the benchmark that all other fantasy worlds are measured by.
@ThunderDawg893 ай бұрын
And its our favourite 😂
@joekrafft7125Ай бұрын
not to mention by far probably the most in depth world with entire languages able to be learned. detailed accounts of cultures etc
@AcroNinja6663 ай бұрын
Michael Moorcock’s Eternal Champion books which include Elric of Melniboné, Dorian Hawkmoon, Erekose, and Corum definitely deserves a mention. Elric’s world contains a boiling sea, a sighing desert, and many unique settings, with chaos looming at its edges. Moorcock laid the blueprint for a Multiverse. A concept adapted by Marvel, and several others. His work inspired the Witcher series, and George R. R. Martin. I certainly feel that Michael Moorcock’s work deserves much more praise than it receives.
@davidbyster92493 ай бұрын
His Rune Staff books, were just wonderful
@Tbonethe1nfinite2 ай бұрын
Check out Razorfists video on how the Witcher is essentially an Elric ripoff.
@mycroftholmes29923 ай бұрын
The Midkemia and Kelawen from Raymond Feist, Mithgar from McKiernan (although derivative of Tolkein he makes it unique), Mars from Burrows John Carter series is also a great fantasy setting
@denisefrench31202 жыл бұрын
Two worlds I have loved are the planet of Pern from the Dragonriders of Pern series. Also the world built in David Eddings The Belgariad series of books.
@jaxr295810 ай бұрын
I feel like not enough people have read the Dragonriders series.
@tanyahardman43213 ай бұрын
The Belgariad is a really simple series. A quest and clear good vs evil. A great book but lacking in depth history for the 7,000 years shown.
@d4r4butler743 ай бұрын
@@tanyahardman4321 The 12 Books in the Belgariad & Mallorean series (5 each plus the prequels) flesh out the world and explain the repetitions in all manner of life until the final Choice has been made and the Universe can proceed quite well. I also loved the Pern books; they were some of my first Fantasy books to own.
@dirkbsilver92603 ай бұрын
The Belgariad is a wonderous place. Some of the lore slips now and again, but it is a place I love to go.
@tomaskops71192 ай бұрын
@@jaxr2958 Really not so comon known, its shame
@hoodedwizard46953 ай бұрын
I think Warhammer Fantasy definitely deserves an honorable mention.
@Zathaghil3 ай бұрын
Not really. The entire franchise is oot. And when everyone is oot, no one is. It exists so players can say " my character is literally 109 times stronger than yours from your game" but if EVERYONE is, then no one is.
@chernobyl682 ай бұрын
@Regarded69 he should have said OTT "over the top". The Old World is the role-playing component of warhammer fantasy (WFRP) and has been a part of the franchise since the 80s. That's the world that should be included, not the fantasy battles game, or Age of Sigmar.
@daddymasamune54852 ай бұрын
I was like "nah he didn't exclude Middle earth and put Warhammer at #1?" Just to be saddened that it didn't even get an honorable mention.
@bz60462 ай бұрын
I think he's doing worlds from books he's read. I don't think he's including video games.
@daddymasamune54852 ай бұрын
@@bz6046 Warhammer is not a video game... That's a World told in books as a setting for a table top war game.
@terrillrogers9983 Жыл бұрын
I like Anne McCaffrey’s Pern as well as Valdemar by Mercedes Lackey
@joerosenman34803 ай бұрын
I was going to speak up about Mercedes Lackey’s Velgarth (within which is the land of Valdemar, the subject land in which most of her Valdemar novels are set). As you know, a world with magical beings; with a society set at a stage that’s kind of a blend of our Medieval & Renaissance; a developed magic systems, including mind magic, magic from the land, elemental and demonic; multiple religions and active deities; politics; eon-long recovery from apocalyptic disaster that still could destroy the world-engineered by deity appointed servants in secret; Autocratic empires, Kings/Queens… a history that spans more than 2000 years. Fun times!
@RissaFirecat2 ай бұрын
Love Anne McCaffrey!
@kennethcook9406Ай бұрын
I wholeheartedly agree.
@roseNthorn2 жыл бұрын
Im glad you mentioned Forgotten Realms. That was my first introduction to fantasy with The Crystal Shard waaayyy back in the late 80's. I thought you did a great job on the video!
@Tizzie-j6l3 ай бұрын
My first video game experience was the original Neverwinter, but Gormengast might be my favourite, if the Discworld didn't have so much depth and believability. Years ago I read an odd and rather flawed book called Orouburos, which is set on the world occupied by the races Fairies and Demons, neither quite as they are imagined today. My copy has Aubrey Beardsley type illustrations which is exactly right for the tone of the book.
@alt72442 ай бұрын
Me too. I was doing laundry. Next door, someone had a yard sale. I found the crystal shard in a pile with no cover, bought it, and went on reading forgotten realms for years.
@0Zolrender0Ай бұрын
Me too. I own most of the "Forgotten Realms" books as well as all of the similar "DragonLance" novels.
@davidshepherd16343 ай бұрын
The Shannara Chronicles and Ranger's Apprentice are also really good
@damouze3 ай бұрын
I'm missing two fantasy worlds: the setting of Terry Goodkind's "Sword of Truth" series and the setting of the Terry Brooks's Shannara Chronicles. It's only near the end of each series original set of books that we learn that these worlds are in fact future or alternate versions of earth. And I would also like to mention Dune, even though technically speaking it's sci-fi. The world building Frank Herbert did is superb and deserves at least an honourable mention ;-).
@dakotacognion52196 ай бұрын
I think the original D&D world Greyhawk and Robert E. Howard's Hyboria deserve honorable mentions as well.
@chernobyl682 ай бұрын
Can't believe they included dragonlance and not greyhawk
@yojimbo301Ай бұрын
@@chernobyl68 But it clear that they don't know Dragonlance is also a D&D setting
@dennismokry2585 күн бұрын
@@chernobyl68sadly Gygax’s novels were not on par with the world building for the game setting IMO. I don’t think many people, including many current ttrpg players, know that there are books set in the Greyhawk setting by several different authors. Personally I really enjoyed Paul Kidd’s books following the Justicar.
@chernobyl685 күн бұрын
@@dennismokry258 I wasn't into reading the fantasy novels from RPG settings, but I enjoyed other fantasy books like Xanth and the Apprentice Adept series. Big Piers Anthony fan
@RonaldGray-v8b2 ай бұрын
An Interesting world was by Roger Zelazny in the Chronicles of Amber. Nine Princes of Amber was the novel that got be interested in Fantasy as a young teenager. Ahh, to walk the shadow. I don't know if it would be a top 10, but definitely an honorable mention for originality.
@JaimeTanner-b2iАй бұрын
Amber, yes. Number three on my list.
@andrewswift71433 ай бұрын
I'm surprised that Fionnavar, the world created by Guy Gavriel Kay, is not mentioned here. This author is phenomenally talented and writes simply mind-blowing books. If you haven't read the books of the Fionnavar Tapestry (and all his other books as well), then you have missed some truly elegant world building. This guy is amazing.
@cornpiglet90312 жыл бұрын
Even though you’re not as big as you should be, your content is by far some of the best on KZbin. The music choice, the background scenes, your narration, everything comes together so well! Continue making videos, I’ll definitely continue watching!
@CapturedInWords2 жыл бұрын
Wow this comment makes my day :D Thanks!
@David.Calhoun Жыл бұрын
I agree whole heartedly! Keep up the amazing stuff!
@newbernpuppets9292 ай бұрын
While I am probably revealing my age, but Edgar Rice Borroughs created many fantasy worlds including Barsoom. Also L. Frank Baum's was a gifted writer who created the world of Oz - a marvelous fantasy world.
@JaimeTanner-b2iАй бұрын
Oz was my first and favorite.
@emiliano15452 жыл бұрын
Bro, I really love the way you commit to your channel, it’s incredible how you make more than 20 minutes feels like 5. I am truly learning a lot from you! 🤟🏾
@puckwithahalo142 жыл бұрын
Great list! I would probably toss in Kelewan/Midkemia from Raymond Feist's books. Also, while it was never explicitly stated in WoT, I always enjoyed that it hinted at it being post-apocalyptic Earth.
@BigggusDikkkus Жыл бұрын
Oh man especially Kelewan! The empire trilogy was an absolute masterpiece!
@trevorreads2 жыл бұрын
This video is so well done man! Loved seeing Narnia on this list. I read them for the first time as a senior in high school and they are the books that made me love reading! Your production quality is top notch btw. Loved watching this!
@Daijinthetripod2 жыл бұрын
Gorgeously edited video Jay, really enjoyed it!
@AnotherBrownAjah2 жыл бұрын
Should get into editing videos for construction companies
@CapturedInWords2 жыл бұрын
@@AnotherBrownAjah long story but I ended up quitting with them since they basically ripped me off 2 months of pay 😅
@CapturedInWords2 жыл бұрын
Thanks man!! I spent so much time editing this one ahahaa
@fantasyworlds21 Жыл бұрын
Right this is amazing
@diegoborges37162 жыл бұрын
Also are worth mention the world of Elric of Melniboné and the Hyborian Age of Conan.
@purplelibraryguy87293 ай бұрын
I think we need to draw a distinction here between what's a good fantasy book and what counts as good worldbuilding. There isn't really a ton of worldbuilding to Elric; I always felt like he was just landing in these random places that had no real relationship to each other. Sometimes they were cool places, and Melnibone itself is cool as all get out. And in Howard's case . . . I mean, he probably did more worldbuilding than anyone from his era, but at the same time, I've read historical fiction stories of his that were literally Conan stories with the names changed, or vice versa, so.
@givex21202 жыл бұрын
The only thing that was missing imo in the list was Malazan, can't wait till you read more of it, it's absolutely amazing. Overall great list, I'm glad Realm of the Elderlings got a mention, I think that series is very underrated. Love your content btw, very high quality ;)
@CapturedInWords2 жыл бұрын
I can't wait to dive more into Malazan! I plan on getting into it more in 2023 :) Thanks for watching!
@overgrownkudzu9 ай бұрын
agreed, malazan deserves to make this list
@Livaiduis3 ай бұрын
Couldn t agree more with this comment,thankyou for posting it. malazan is a dark jewel, thats still yet to be recognized by the general book crowd.Overal great work nontheless❤
@larskarlsson19592 ай бұрын
The Malazan world is breathtaking with several large continents and hundreds.of.thousands of years of history and races like the Jaghut and the different Tiste and Toblakai and T'llan I'Mass and the gods and ascendants and Soltaken and D'ivers and Warrens and Holds and the Deck of Dragons and demons and too many amazing characters to list.
@filegumbo Жыл бұрын
The Land-The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant. I find the environments of those novels (especially the first two trilogies) to be extremely intriguing.
@jaxr295810 ай бұрын
I enjoyed these as a youth to begin with, but as an adult and knowing by the end how the protagonist became more and more unsavory. All I would now hope for is Thomas to die asap. Plus has not aged well with the very shaky ground where the author appears to find rape excusable.
@filegumbo10 ай бұрын
@@jaxr2958 Good point, but do you avoid watching television with unsavory characters? I am re-watching the Sopranos and it is full of unsavory characters who do all sorts of horrible things, rape just one among them.
@jaxr295810 ай бұрын
@@filegumbo I guess I do avoid, I haven't watched an episode of Sopranos. I strongly don't think it is OK to have a protagonist that corrupt though, that should be the antagonist. Especially if it's a bit of a journey. It's kind of conditioning and so many people can point to their heroes now and say, see it's OK to be an ahole. An example to me was George Lucas leading a generation through the corruption of Anakin. He made that character a role model for children, then had him shoot up a school and beat/kill his wife.
@filegumbo10 ай бұрын
@@jaxr2958 I see where you're coming from. That's an older generation of film and literature where there was the John Wayne good guy and the moustache-twirling bad guy. Now every hero has to be an "anti-hero" or conflicted in some way. I don't think it will go back to the old days.
@jaxr295810 ай бұрын
@@filegumbo Agree, but don't think it's just an older generation. I think it's been the way of stories for millennia. Stories were always used to reinforce good social behavior and the benefits of such. Greek mythology, bible stories various myths and folklore.
@joelhess14362 жыл бұрын
1.malazan 2.lotr 3.song of ice and fire 4.name of the wind 5.Wheel of time 6.Stormlight 7.demon saga (peter v. Brett) 8.mistborn 9.narnia 10.locke lamora
@lukedumoulin82044 ай бұрын
Locke lamora mentioned
@TheTrueRandomGamer2 жыл бұрын
As far as books go, Dark Tower definitely deserves a high spot on the list. If we're allowed to bring up manga I'd also include Berserk.
@Jw87563 Жыл бұрын
Don't forget One Piece.
@jenkips9026 Жыл бұрын
Why Berserk? It is rather shallow in its setting and worldbuilding. If anything stands out from Japanese works, it is Fate (or rather the entire Nasuverse).
@TheTrueRandomGamer9 ай бұрын
@@jenkips9026I don't think constructing a detailed metaphysical reality is shallow.
@glc7043 ай бұрын
@@TheTrueRandomGamer which berserk doesn't...it's a character focuses series
@neutral_narrАй бұрын
@@TheTrueRandomGamerI still wouldn't put it here
@michaelwilliams74003 ай бұрын
Prydian from Lloyd Alexander's The High King and The Black Cauldron. It has been a while, but i spent a lot of tims with Taran and company as a kid.
@davidgorman9942 жыл бұрын
Love this and yes, I feel that Ankh-Morpork from Discworld is my favourite city.
@CapturedInWords2 жыл бұрын
Yesss! Gotta love Discworld
@paulasargent7363 Жыл бұрын
I think the best world for me that is not included on the list is the world of Pern By Ann Macaffrey. It may not be the most epic of all but the unique science fantasy planet origins to the re accruing threat of the thread, to the relationship the riders have with there dragons as well as the feudal type system with holds, lords, guilds etc makes it a brilliant world to get lost in!
@jamesnorton20632 ай бұрын
Yes! I’m so glad you mentioned this! My absolute favorite. I would love to see a movie based on this.
@JaimeTanner-b2iАй бұрын
A wonderful world, one of my favorites. Not a fantasy world, however. Pure science fiction.
@Ryan-vl2nn9 ай бұрын
My 6th grade teacher Mrs. Hunter read to us The Lion, Witch and the Wardrobe as well as The Lord of the Rings: Fellowship of the Ring after we had to read The Hobbit ourselves for homework. And both of these books inspired not just myself, but many of my friends and fellow classmate, to continue reading the following editions to these amazing worlds. I ended up reading The Two Towers, Return of the King as well as The Silmarillion before graduating 6th grade. And with C.S. Lewis I read every book in the series. Which just goes to show how an amazing teacher coupled with a gift for storytelling amazing tales can inspire so many children.
@pattypage67232 ай бұрын
Terry Goodkind. Sword of Truth series. Don’t hear about it much anymore but it does build quite the worlds
@Wrighthook3 ай бұрын
I think I would have included : The worlds of Midkemia and Kelewan in Reymond E Feist's Magician series ahead of Gormanghast, if you have not read this fanatasy series I highly recommend it.
@mattcat83 Жыл бұрын
The Myst series of videogames had some pretty cool imaginary worlds.
@CapturedInWords Жыл бұрын
Ahhh Myst!! Haven't played any of those forever! But yes they definitely do!
@mouseearsonmainstreet8643 Жыл бұрын
I absolutely watched the BBC movies for The Chronicles of Narnia. We used to stay at our friend's cabin in Wyoming every summer for vacation and the only VHSs they had were the BBC Chronicles of Narnia and another classic about a dog and a dolphin called Zeus and Roxanne. Nostalgia at its height!
@MusicMike939 Жыл бұрын
The witch world by Andre Norton. 9 princes in Amber by Roger Zelazny. Swords series by Fred Saberhagen. So many others. Good job over all.
@TLBainter2 жыл бұрын
Really loving your new space (and as always, the heart you put into editing your videos)!
@kyobeyeler22133 ай бұрын
Totally agree with number 1! ❤❤❤ I also loved the world of Eragon, Alagaesia!
@cameronmccoy50513 ай бұрын
The main attraction for me in Alagaësia is the magic system. I love the idea behind how the Grey Folk bound their language to wild magic and thus giving "The Ancient Language" its properties. That and the way telepathy is also interwoven into magic. Add to that the way he wrote Dragons. Wild dragons as well as Bonded dragons. The Eldunari. Their unique form of magic. How there are other types of magic (even though he didn't really get into Sorcery or Witchcraft that much). And so many other little tidbits that never got explored but could have been entire series of their own. Like Angela's teacher and how he taught her to basically dilate time (how she killed the priests in the church in Dras Leona like she was the Flash). Angela in general. The Nïdhwalar, and the fact that this all took place in a country a little bit bigger than California, which leaves all kinds of possibilities.
@RufusROFLpunch Жыл бұрын
I feel like Pern definitely deserved an honorable mention.
@cscs883 ай бұрын
Love that fantasy video is sponsoring established titles. A literal fantasy product.
@CapturedInWords3 ай бұрын
This video was posted a year ago before the Established Titles controversy. At the time a lot of KZbinrs were working with them, and I just assumed it was like a novelty gift. I stopped working with them though after all that, so the sponsor portion hasn't aged well
@cscs883 ай бұрын
@@CapturedInWords Love the video. Just thought this was funny and ironic
@matheusvmoraes2 жыл бұрын
Amazing video, Jay! One of my favorite worlds is the one from the Gentleman Bastards (especially the city of Camorr).
@CapturedInWords2 жыл бұрын
Camorr is awesome!! I always find it so interesting how the skeleton of the city is this network of Elderglass towers and bridges that were left over from a lost civilization
@RodgersReads2 жыл бұрын
This was fun! Amazing editing as always, just a random factoid the world building of Discworld with the world on elephants on a turtle's back is straight out of Hindu mythology. It's still super cool though!!
@booksandocha2 жыл бұрын
Wow, nice to see a shoutout for Gormenghast, that was hugely influential on me when I was younger. One of the more uniquely written books I've read.
@CapturedInWords2 жыл бұрын
Awesome to see someone else who's read it!!! I never see people talking about it and nobody I know has read or heard of it
@booksandocha2 жыл бұрын
@@CapturedInWords It seems to be kind of a forgotten gem nowadays. There was some revival of interest back when the BBC tv serial came out, but it is such an odd duck that it's no surprise that few read it. Which is a shame, it is an amazingly evocative story.
@Amlewi0801 Жыл бұрын
I actually read them BECAUSE of this channel, and they are amongst my favorites now!
@s.p.85082 жыл бұрын
A really underrated world is the world from Bloodsworn by John Gwynne. The way Gwynne incorporated the gods into the landscape was phenomenal.
@ALSeth-Storyteller4 ай бұрын
The world of DISHONORED is remarkable and always overlooked. Everythign about it is fascinating, from the City of Dunwall, The Outsider, The Whales and the Plagues. And the steampunk, pre-scifi setting truly makes it a unique fantasy world. The lore alone is one of the most unique in all fantasies, it has a very Lovecraftian backdrop.
@xiiir8383 ай бұрын
1. Pick any western European country as base. 2. Sprinkle some fantasy particles on it. 3. You have now the empire of the isles.
@ALSeth-Storyteller3 ай бұрын
@@xiiir838 1. Pick any city in the West based on its politic: republic, monarchy, duchy, principate, etc. 2. Structure its mythology, history, culture and aesthetics to the point where the city feels lived in. 3. Write a story about one particular event in an era that becomes its defining characteristic.
@henriklarsson52212 жыл бұрын
The BBC series of Narnia was one of my absolute favorite shows as a kid when it came to Sweden in the late 80s, premiering on christmas-eve 1989, what a great gift that was.
@dagda30003 ай бұрын
The world of the Belgariad series (David Eddings). The world of the Might & Magic video games.
@jwcopley2 жыл бұрын
I think the biggest "problem" with Temerant is the world is very much a mystery since we are only seeing it via 1 POV that shows us the world mainly as he visits it. If we knew more, I think it's likelyhood of being a top 10 could rise drastically.
@CapturedInWords2 жыл бұрын
Yeah that's a great point, I 100% agree!
@andreescalona8902 Жыл бұрын
I do think that despite that, Temerant is still better developed and just plainly more interesting than, say, the world from Mistborn. Scale ≠ Depth, imo
@jchinckley Жыл бұрын
@@andreescalona8902 Well, when an author has only written 3 books in the last twenty years that's to be expected. I love Rothfuss' writing and his story, but he takes way too long. Sanderson's prose may not be as good as Pat's, but his stories move a lot more people (apparently--I've only read his first: Elantris... and the first 100 or so pages of the first Mistborn book) than Pat seems to even with his superior prose. I'll be happy if Pat publishes The Doors of Stone before he leaves for the afterlife.
@Kenb3d12 жыл бұрын
Solid list. I think you got all the important ones. A couple more I'd throw into the mix for contention: - Some of the settings from Warhammer, the Gotrek and Felix novels in particular do a decent job of worldbuilding here. - Arguably more Sci-fi with additional fantasy elements, and also not literature, but Final Fantasy 7 is underrated in this regard, the world sticks with you, Midgar and the underplate, Golden Saucer, Wutai etc. - Similar to the above but the setting from Dishonoured is also memorable.
@shengami2 ай бұрын
I'm very happy to see someone putting love on Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn. It doesn't get mentioned enough for what it did for Fantasy. I still reread it every few years and treasure my copy as it's getting harder and harder to find. Simon's journey and growth still impress me even thirty years later.
@Steve_Stowers2 жыл бұрын
The Land, from Stephen R. Donaldson's Chronicles of Thomas Covenant. My overall feelings about this series are mixed, but there are things I love about it, and one of those things is its setting. This is easily one of my favorite fantasy worlds. But before any of the ones listed here, there was Oz, setting of the series of books by Frank Baum. How can you have a list of great fantasy worlds without Oz?
@JeremyCorobai69420 Жыл бұрын
Obviously. I grew up on oz! I love oz so much
@dinocollins7202 жыл бұрын
The art in this video was so sick!!!!!!
@willwillis51862 жыл бұрын
My favorites would have to include Valdemar by Mercedes Lackey.
@georgiancountryball202 Жыл бұрын
The grishaverse series could also deserve an honorable mention which is still expanding but is still cool
@xiiir838 Жыл бұрын
YES!! Bardugo created an A+ tier setting
@technoblade58474 ай бұрын
While explaining Martin's world, you forgot about Essos(the bigger continent). Not much is shown in the series but in the books...... don't even ask me. There are places like The Free Cities, Lhazaar, Slaver's Bay, Ruins of Old Valyria, The Great Grass Sea and after the Bones, begins the Far East, a place filled with magic and strange people featuring places like Ib, Leng, The Great Moraq, Ten Thousand Isles, The Plains of Jogos Nhai, N'Ghai, Golden Empire of Yi Ti(on which HBO will be making a series called the Golden Empire), The Grey Waste, The Deep Dry, The Shadow Lands, Asshai and Stygai and many more. Martin has literally wrote a whole book only on the known world called The World of Ice and Fire(TWOIAF). No matter what one says, in worldbuilding, none can beat Martin, not even JRRT. Don't believe my, read TWOIAF yourself online and you'll know what I am saying. The reason this series do not get much attention is because of the bad ending of the TV series and and the last book being published in 2011 and also the fact that it's adult fantasy which many do not like. Edit: 19:44 you say he made 3000 years of history, GRRM made more than 15000, each detailed af. From the Great Empire of the Dawn which ended during the long night to the Targaryen history. Martin literally told in an interview that he made so much that if he put all of it in TWOIAF, it would be at least 15 books.
@keanancupido3 ай бұрын
Agreed, there's so much that we still have to see in the east too! Some of my favourite locations were along the river where Tyrion was sailing in Dance of Dragons. And the Valyrian road that was solid stone, I literally loved the descriptions about that!
@MS-io6kl3 ай бұрын
Well everything before the Andal invasion of Westeros is highly speculative. Of course it's said that Bran the Builder built the wall some 8000 years before Aegons Conquest but all this very old stuff is as historical in the world of ASOIAF as Methusalem and Adam living for more than 900 years each in our World. Sure there are stories but does the chronology hold up? Who knows. Martin is deliberately vague about this stuff. The Valyrian Freehold, the Ghiscari Wars, the Andal Invasion these are the first in Universe events whose dates are historic and not mystical. Depending how Marrin feels the timeliness could be as long as 15000 or as short as 5000 years.
@KingOfWinter3 ай бұрын
@@MS-io6kltrue but honestly the vagueness is part of what makes George’s world feel so real. The fact that historians argue about what did and didn’t happen in the real world all the time and how George was able to capture that feeling in his world is absolutely mind blowing. Not to mention it gives the reader so much leeway to play around with the world and make it something unique to them which only strengthens the readers connection to the story and lore of the world as a whole. I can completely understand LOTR being number 1 but number 2 should have 100% been ASOIAF. Sometimes being popular doesn’t automatically mean it’s overrated, sometimes the story/world is just that damn good it should be highly rated. There are a lot of obscure books/worlds that are really good but there is also a reason ASOIAF captured the imagination of almost the entire world.
@tonmoysam25333 ай бұрын
Should've just said ASOIAF Or Planetos
@digitalvictory82667 күн бұрын
Your production is off-the-charts! Well done!! And a fine list!
@caewing852 жыл бұрын
Roshar is a vast world! I am loving it!
@CapturedInWords2 жыл бұрын
Wooo!! Glad you're reading Stormlight!
@bigbake1322 ай бұрын
The Belgariad series deserves to be on the list. Also the Shannara series too. Hyborea (Conan the Barbarian) as well.
@hmmmm28242 жыл бұрын
Great video! I'm towards the end of Before They Are Hanged, and I really like the world of First Law. Yes, the characters are the main focus (as they should be, because they are Glocta and Logen and so on) but the world is really interesting. All the history with devils, the magi, the spirits and everything else is just wonderful.
@stevebrooks23613 ай бұрын
There are a few I would put forward, Jack Vance for "The Dying Earth" series and the "Lyonesse" books....but I have so many favourites, I think these two rank up there with some of those presented here.
@MarkReed-smokindeist3 ай бұрын
Dying Earth is a great series where often the "hero" of the story is slightly less evil than the villain. It was also one of the big influences for Archaeus, the setting for the Talislanta RPG. Also Lovecraft's dream world.
@mitchellsmith30212 жыл бұрын
Great video! I hope to see Malazan on this list soon when you get a chance to read it. I was at your Zelda livestream yesterday and just wanted to say that you should really keep up streaming because it was a great time!
@JediHobbit89 Жыл бұрын
Hell yeah! Glad to see Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn getting some love. It's still my favorite take on traditional elves.
@SaulOhio10 ай бұрын
You could have included Ann Mcaffrey's Pern. Some might object that this is more science fiction than fantasy. Pern is a planet colonized by people from Earth, who came in perfectly natural, science and technology based space ships. But it has dragons. And telepathy. Telepathic dragons. With the power of psychic teleportation. So it is fantasy.
@ankebosing19683 ай бұрын
I love that series!
@jamesnorton20632 ай бұрын
I’m so glad that Anne McCaffrey and Mercedes Lackey books are mentioned several times here. Two of my favorites. Let me add one more. The world of Darkover by Marion Zimmer Bradley. A planet with very little heavy metals so they developed a science of psi technology to help them. Great series!
@dinocollins7202 жыл бұрын
I watch basically all your videos and I think this was my favorite you have ever made!!! It was soooooo good!!!
@CapturedInWords2 жыл бұрын
Thanks so much, that makes me happy to hear!!! I put a lot of work into this one!
@dinocollins7202 жыл бұрын
@@CapturedInWords I almost always watch everything at 1.5x speed but I had to slow this down so I could admire all the amazing art and I ended up watching multiple multiple times because it was so good! Seriously amazing! I never rewatch videos either haha
@nissen47002 ай бұрын
If you make or made a part 2 to this list, I hope The Sword of Truth will get a mention.
@johnplatt370410 ай бұрын
There is quite a lot not discussed lately. You certainly deserve props for including Gormenghast, but there are a few (not ten) you should consider. 1. Pegana by Lord Dunsany. Ursula LeGuin said when they start out everyone tries to write like Dunsany then they realize they can't. Lovecraft's Dreamland stories, Moorcock's Stealer of Souls and Stormbringer, Tanith Lee's Flat Earth spring to mind. 2. Fletcher Pratt's world of the Blue Star. This is probably his greatest work period. 3.C. S. Lewis Malacandra and Perelandra. Narnia is not even my favorite Lewis. His Space Trilogy shows why. 4. Witch World. Andre Norton was incredible. End subject. 5. Tormance from David Lindsay's A Voyage to Arcturus. In the 1970's top-ranked literary critic Harold Bloom humiliated himself by publishing a "novel" which was an inferior copy of this. You'd have to understand the state of Gnostic Studies at the time for the why to make sense. But I couldn't help give Bloom props for his choice while my friends just laughed. 6. Barsoom.Yeah, Burroughs couldn't write and it's Science Fiction. However like Howard and Henry Kuttner Burroughs was heavily influenced by Theosophy and the reason so much of John Carter was familiar was that so many authors have stolen from him.
@anadegoslingАй бұрын
Not sure if this even counts or if you’ve read it, but after reading berserk I fell IN LOVE with its world. It has so many interesting themes that the world is used to express through itself like concepts of fate/free-will, morality, destiny, spirituality, Will Power and Human Spirit, religion etc…, ON TOP of that having some the most sick (I mean that in two ways) characters and creatures
@pjopitz3 ай бұрын
I'm surprised Hyborea wasn't mentioned.
@henrik83872 жыл бұрын
A question. Raymond E Fiest shaped my view as a young lad on what books were, the leap from JK Rowling, my first ever book I read, to Raymonds many many books was what got me hooked on reading, like all reading. How come you never mentions his works in an emense world building, or any other theme you present? Is he considered like "to tropy" in fanstasy genere or? No lists from youtubers on notewordy fantasy ever mentions his work, and Im just wondering why :) Loved your series on Kingkiller, so hyped for book 3!
@louisbrown46202 жыл бұрын
They hate him because is world is too White and traditionally male.
@darkwitnesslxx2 жыл бұрын
Recency bias.
@feiryfella2 ай бұрын
@@darkwitnesslxx Yeah, no Stephen Donaldson!
@sono_chi_no_sodium_chlorid7635 Жыл бұрын
"Martin thought of names in detail" Meanwhile the oldest city in Westeros is called "Oldtown", and one of the kingdoms is called "North"
@Trippels-c6f4 ай бұрын
Just because the oldtown existet even before the first men makes it not to the oldest city
@raph36993 ай бұрын
Crazy how that happens in real life too
@sono_chi_no_sodium_chlorid76353 ай бұрын
@@raph3699 Not so literally. If it was realistic, Martin would make up different names and mention how the language or people inhabiting the city changed but the name stuck. If it worked like that irl 90% of cities would be called "River City" "Old City" and "Tall Mountain"
@raph36993 ай бұрын
@@sono_chi_no_sodium_chlorid7635 well, we do have Newcastle and some other (I’m not English so most of the example coming to my head would be hard to translate.)
@sono_chi_no_sodium_chlorid76353 ай бұрын
@@raph3699 Yes, but compared to others they are quite few. There are a bunch of names that are hard to understand without knowing the further context
@gordonm18283 ай бұрын
For me the books to add would be Sword of truth by Terry Goodkind. It wasn’t as flesh out as it could have been but the prehistory of the wizards, mriswith, Gars, the chimes, dream walkers the splitting of the lands etc was all fascinating. Though the quick solving of the issues by Richard left things to be desired but I still enjoyed it. The Runelords by David Farland, had amazing world building and a fascinating magic system with the blood metals and vectoring along with the creatures of the world just great. The recluse saga by L.E. Modesitt Jr. was at first hard to follow but once you understood what the series was and why it was doing what it was doing was great. Others in short The shanara books Elenium and tamuli Last of the Renshai
@MrJoneschase3 ай бұрын
Great list! I’m excited for you to dive into the Malazan books. That series is truly my favorite and the Path to Ascendency prequel books are top tier as well even if the series isn’t finished yet. It’ll be interesting to see how you rank it into a future list if you do.
@lunatickgeo5 ай бұрын
I was going to lead a war party for not having Earthsea in the top ten but I was forced to recognize that this is a personal list so I'll it slide. Worlds you might have forgotten or not yet encountered are Raymond E. Feist's (and Janny Wurtz). Not so much the Kingdom of the Isles which is pretty generic but Kelewan, the world on the other side of the rifts where the Tsurani come from. Jo Clayton's Drinker of Souls series paints a really exotic world where nothing is familiar but nothing is too alien either. It brings to mind of visiting spice markets in Indonesia and bazaars in India and Morocco. And for nostalgia's sake, Lloyd Alexander's Prydain.
@ariaslibrary2 жыл бұрын
You'll need to give me a minute before I continue with the rest of the video as I process that introduction because wow. I replayed that so many times. 😭
@thesunshineseekers2 жыл бұрын
That intro was WILD! So immersive 👌🏼
@williamharrison7845 Жыл бұрын
I don't know if the world itself has a name, but i love the world building of the Powder Mage series by Brian McClellan. Many distinct nations, multiple classes of magic that are all very different from one another, all spread over multiple continents. A very enjoyable read, and great world building IMO.
@MMAT163 ай бұрын
Narnia, Fantasía (from The neverending story), Adarlan (from Throne of glass), Krynn, Westeros, The Continent, Temerant, Los Confines (Liliana Bodoc), Earthsea, Middle Earth. Plus honorable mentions: Earl and the Elflands (Lord Dunsany), the world of Kothar (Cumberia? (G. F. Fox)), Osten Ard, Hyboria, Discworld, Mercurio (from The worm Ouroboros), Vance´s Dying Earth, Forgotten Realms, the world that includes Melniboné, The Old World (Warhammer), the world described by Louise Cooper (Lord of No Time), and Blood and Ash`s Solis, Atlantia and Iliseeum... =)
@Watcherobot3 ай бұрын
Tamriel from the Elder Scrolls games and books
@tamlynburleigh92672 ай бұрын
I read the three Gormenghast books, it was amazing! I lived in that castle as I read it. Melvyn Peake describes every detail beautifully.
@CapturedInWords2 ай бұрын
Glad to hear you enjoyed Gormenghast! I 100% can relate, I feel like I've lived in that castle. Mervyn Peake was such a talented author
@blxckfyre2 жыл бұрын
Your editing is so fantastic! Always so entertaining watching your videos.
@Thagomizer8 ай бұрын
You picked the two most generic D&D settings? I have nothing against Forgotten Realms or Dragonlance, but they have nothing on Darksun or Planescape.
@RabbitShirak3 ай бұрын
Darksun is amazing.
@jared82682 ай бұрын
Agreed. And the world from the Deathgate Cycle books is incredibly cool.
@tracylamb29713 ай бұрын
Awesome video!! My top ten Book Fantasy worlds. 1. Valdemar 2. Middle Earth 3. Pern 4. Darkover ( Marion Zimmer Bradley) 5. The Four Lands ( Shannara) 6. Narnia 7. Earthsea 8. Belgariad ( David Eddings) 9. Xanth ( Piers Anthony ) 10. WofT But actually my #1 favorite Fantasy world is Tamriel. But as the list was book series, I didn't go there.. For anyone that doesnt know, Tamriel is the world on which The Elder Scrolls games is set. If you want to check it out.... TES The Imperial Library...
@bigbake1322 ай бұрын
Yeah Belgariad deserves a mention at least.
@jared82682 ай бұрын
Isn’t Xanth technically just Florida?
@tracylamb29712 ай бұрын
@@jared8268 In the era that the books are written, yes. But at one time it was Italy, there was even a pun about a boot in the rear. At least I remember a reference, but I started reading the books in Jr High school, though if I remember correctly the 1st books came out in the late 70's. For reference I graduated High School in 88... I think the last time I read the full series ( as it was at that time ) was in the late 90s and then I gave all the books I had to my son and bought on Kindle my favorites. Not just Xanth books, but a collection of over 2k books. I downsized.
@jared82682 ай бұрын
@@tracylamb2971 I’m class of 89 and probably started reading the books around the same time you did. Funny. Now that you mention the boot reference, it rings a bell. So many puns in that series. I too have a large library, but haven’t been able to bring myself to downsize. Worse! I’ve been buying books I remember from my youth, like Thieves World and the Elric Saga. They cost me more than they should because I insist on the cover art of he books had when I read them. 😀
@tracylamb29712 ай бұрын
@@jared8268 Yeah, I read those, I love Thieves World. Thankfully my cover art obsession was with Andre Norton and M.Z.B. ... and Louis Lamour... not quite as expensive. When I gave my collection to my son, I had 4 different versions of cover art for Hondo. the original, 2 made for TV versions on with John Wayne, and the Anniversary edition.
@eminkilicaslan89453 ай бұрын
Is a real pity Earthsea isn't in the list. I hold it higher than a few in the list like Narnia and Wheel of Time. Good list anyhow.
@podeshahejalol9 ай бұрын
This is my favorite video of yours... maybe a new top 10 world's? 🤔🤔🤔
@Rob_Bot Жыл бұрын
You're the best, bro. Of course I'm here here for the book/fantasy details, but man... I love your editing style, transitions, and humor. This channel is easily one of the best on KZbin!
@zharendragon Жыл бұрын
I wish that Krondor from Raymond E. Feist Riftwar cycle was on the list
@CapturedInWords Жыл бұрын
I really need to read the Riftwar Cycle, it's been on my list of series to get to for ages now. I'll try to get to it soon!
@GauravSingh-jg2wd2 жыл бұрын
What a beautiful and elaborated video. If someone watches this video and they have still not read any fantasy I guess they might start reading it. Your video once again made me realise just how amazing books can be.
@remembertobreathe66 Жыл бұрын
Something you may not have had time to get to is the Death Gate Cycle series by Weis and Hickman. The world (our world?) was shattered at the Sundering to protect one magical race from another, but the consequences are terrible from a humanitarian, as well as magical, standpoint.
@jared82682 ай бұрын
@@remembertobreathe66 I absolutely loved these books. Recently ordered a new set off eBay to replace the set I gave away years ago. Such creative worlds!
@ceciliaappel7827Ай бұрын
A few things: 1. I have also watched the BBC miniseries of Narnia! It's actually a very well-written and faithful adaption of the books; just a shame that the technology of the time wasn't really up to scratch for the story they were telling. (Tom Baker as Puddleglum is something I will never forget) 2. There is a book out there called "The Writer's Map". It is a collection of essays from various authors about making fantasy maps, and has dozens of gorgeous illustrations from basically every fantasy you've ever heard of, plus many more that you haven't. If you liked this video, I would highly recommend it! 3. One of my personal favorite worlds is the Barbaric Archipelago from the How to Train Your Dragon series by Cressida Cowell. It technically doesn't qualify for this list, given that it's supposed to be located in Scandinavia somewhere, but the many different viking tribes and dozens of detailed dragon species make it feel so alive. The books are also just masterfully written. 4. Middle-earth absolutely deserves the #1 spot. I was eagerly anticipating it for the whole video. LotR is and always will be my all-time favorite book. No judgement here! :D Thank you for the wonderful video! 💕
@ge0metr1xx Жыл бұрын
Nice video. Sad that Robert E. Howard and Hyboria doesn't get the love it deserves from book tubers
@xiiir838 Жыл бұрын
Maybe because it's not so well known nowadays. I just found out about the Conan stories reading the comments of this video
@0Zolrender0Ай бұрын
I am so glad you mentioned "DragonLance Chronicles". I own all of these books and loved them.
@KnifeOfK2 жыл бұрын
I’m honestly so impressed by your editing in these videos. Great work as always!
@jdk77982 жыл бұрын
Jay I loved this video, all of your videos are top tier, but this one blew the roof off. The art, the reasoning, the way you explain your reasoning = Fantastic!
@CapturedInWords2 жыл бұрын
Thank you very much!! I put a ton of work into this video, I'm glad you enjoyed it 😄
@rodlink2355 Жыл бұрын
The Rift War Cycle , Raymond E. Fiest
@CC-5853-ollimir29 күн бұрын
The Belgariad is one that I think should be a honorable mention.
@Felippanda5 ай бұрын
I gotta say the world building of Eichiro Oda in One Piece is beyond astonishing
@davidc.3 ай бұрын
It really isn't. If this was a top 50 it'd be there.
@LukeAdler2 жыл бұрын
How does this video not have more views??? This is top tier content!