Originally Posted by
TesalionLortus
It literally doesn't change anything. It's basically what the game has been doing for XX years and what we expect from it as an adaptation. Expanding.
Did Tolkien ever said what was happening in South Gondor and at its borders / in immediate vicinity for all these years? How battles or politics unfolded? No. That's pretty much sums it all up. There might be more recent reasons for present day diversity from the game (which isn't such a huge one anyway but it's clearly there).
No, it's not how Tolkien set it up. He was doing both. There is nothing wrong with it and Tolkien himself was doing that. Some things are just very undetailed and THAT'S IT (not his intention to stay "internally consistently unrealistic" - seriously, that's just you), some things are specifically a certain way even if might come across as weird or not well thought through (let's say Shire is in that category then, or Breeland overall, or the orc ending in LOTR) and with everything else he was pretty much trying to create a sense of a real world which may feel realistic, with its deep history, nations, languages and these big wars being waged - but didn't have time nor interest to describe every single smaller-scale event... but that doesn't mean he didn't intend to be realistic. It's something I said once before - you either want to have it 100% one way or the other, in this absolutist way.
Rather than repeat that over and over again, as if that was an undeniable fact confirmed by some committee of strawmans, maybe just answer some of my questions to move this discussion along. I don't get it. I asked you some specific questions to try to understand what you even imagine is happening exactly, at the ground level (not general terms), in some of these general situations you try to tell me exist (and frame as clear-cut canon, even though it can be disputed).
Which is still just a very general way of putting it, especially that you would want some raiders or bandits from nearby regions going there to make their life worse, even in times of cease fire, and you wouldn't exactly want them discouraged from doing that. Plus, again, you can tell me that they had every crazy terror law out of North Korea - it still doesn't mean anything if you can't tell me how exactly was that supposed to work at ground level in more ancient/medieval-ish setting (where magic doesn't exactly do any tracking either). Secret police isn't modern but it's efficiency is certainly better and more widespread in modern times. Back then you would mostly focus your efforts in specific areas or countering specific groups, in specific places and with key infrastructure in mind, not on every single individual at every single backyard place no matter of what significance - that is literally a modern advancement in this area, that this level of control has become possible.