"You meet in an Inn..."
Or not. Meeting in an inn or tavern has to be one of the biggest clichés in Fantasy Gaming. I mean, yes it works, but it is certainly a bit of a lazy meeting anymore. But does that make it bad?
Lately, I have noticed, especially with on-line game streamers, that they take the cliché and are very tongue-in-cheek with it. I also think it is something that has largely been replaced by what is now called "Session Zero."
I like Session Zero. You get to meet all the characters as they are being rolled up and some backstory is given. Plus there are other house-keeping items that are covered such as what the game is about, any house rules, and what the limits are.
"Meet in an Inn" and "Session Zero" are not mutually exclusive, but they are both typical of the styles of games they usually start. "Meet in an Inn" is more common with old-school games and "Session Zero" with newer games. There is also one other factor they represent; expectations of character deaths.
"Meeting in an Inn" is often situated in a game where character death is a likely occurrence. Even though the archetype of this trope, the meeting of Strider in the Prancing Pony, resulted in all the participants surviving to the campaign's end.
"Session Zero" is usually associated with the understanding, either tacit or implicit, that the characters have a good chance of survival. There is often the aforementioned back story.
For my "Order of the Platinum Dragon" campaign, I did do the "you meet in an inn" scenario. Again the purpose of that campaign was to give my kids a "classic D&D" experience and I was not going to rob them of that.
For my "War of the Witch Queens" I have not figured out yet how the characters will meet. I know how they are going to get on the trail of the mystery, the murder of the Witch High Queen, but before that, I am still at a blank. But that is ok. There will be a Session Zero, so maybe we can all figure it out then. Although. I really have wanted an excuse to use The Shady Dragon Inn.
It would give me an excuse to use these two,