[QUOTE=RearAdmiral;43276597][URL="http://www.myth-weavers.com/sheetview.php?sheetid=603211"]Oh hey are we posting character sheets[/URL][/QUOTE]
I assume that your character isn't actively carrying all of that stuff.
And here's mine: [url]http://www.myth-weavers.com/sheetview.php?sheetid=712707[/url]
My DM has allowed me access to all spells and we're using a random effects system for spells that the DM rolls in secret and only tells me if it's immediately apparant. So I'm listing them in notepad rather than in the sheet.
We also use d100 for cooking, which is why i've added a misc adjust to calibrate it to that system.
[QUOTE=Twistshock;43276891]I assume that your character isn't actively carrying all of that stuff.
[/QUOTE]
he's probably using the handy haversack listed at the top :v:
also
[QUOTE=Twistshock;43276891]My DM has allowed me access to all spells and we're using a random effects system for spells that the DM rolls in secret and only tells me if it's immediately apparant.[/QUOTE]
[QUOTE=Twistshock;43276891]My DM has allowed me access to all spells[/QUOTE]
[QUOTE=Twistshock;43276891][b]all spells[/b][/QUOTE]
what
[url]http://www.myth-weavers.com/sheetview.php?sheetid=544983[/url]
relic from an old time
Is anyone here doing one-offs or quick scenarios with the Savage Worlds System?
[B]Magical Burst: Session 3: Catfight[/B]
[URL]http://pastebin.com/9HBpmnuD[/URL]
They finish the previously cut short combat with the thing from last time. They have to vent their magical fallout. Eve yells at Satoya because Satoya dragged Ally the nonmagical NPC into combat like a tard. Satoya slaps Eve. Eve and Satoya start fighting each other. Sarah breaks it up. Everyone leaves.
Eve apparently forgot that the retirement home that was just destroyed was where her grandmother, and last remaining family member, was living :v:
[QUOTE=No Party Hats;43277887][url]http://www.myth-weavers.com/sheetview.php?sheetid=544983[/url]
relic from an old time[/QUOTE]
grippli are the coolest
[QUOTE=elowin;43281845]grippli are the coolest[/QUOTE]
Nah man, it's all about the Giff. Space hippos with pith helmets and guns.
[QUOTE=elowin;43281845]grippli are the coolest[/QUOTE]
they really are
except Sir Smipply was a massive piece of shit and a bad person
[editline]23rd December 2013[/editline]
his crabsnakestaff was just a wooden polearm that had snakeskin covering the whole thing with a crab claw at either end, it was the best weapon
Uh. Okay.
I think we just killed off our BBEG early. We entered the "boss room," which was locked with a huge door that we had no chance of breaking down and our thief rolled a natural 20 picking the thing. We entered, BBEG laughs and insults us, and then our "knight" (who is a huge coward and a complete asshole - think prince Charming from Shrek) has a quick look at the room. No windows, no doors, and having rolled a 20 (and having both an elf and a dwarf who didn't notice anything out of the ordinary with the walls, so no secret doors) the DM states that there doesn't appear to be any other way out of the room.
At that, the Knight steps away from the door, drags the thief, and slams it shut. He then starts emptying flasks of acid in to the lock while the thief shoved lockpicks and daggers in to it, as well as under the door (as it opened outwards) all the while the mage is heating the metal.
I'm pretty sure this was the BBEG, as the DM had a big detailed description of his hulking armoured figure and how he gives off this overwhelming sense of evil and a magical aura far beyond that of our mage.
The DM called the session there. Welp.
[QUOTE=DeeCeeTeeBee;43283794]Uh. Okay.
I think we just killed off our BBEG early. We entered the "boss room," which was locked with a huge door that we had no chance of breaking down and our thief rolled a natural 20 picking the thing. We entered, BBEG laughs and insults us, and then our "knight" (who is a huge coward and a complete asshole - think prince Charming from Shrek) has a quick look at the room. No windows, no doors, and having rolled a 20 (and having both an elf and a dwarf who didn't notice anything out of the ordinary with the walls, so no secret doors) the DM states that there doesn't appear to be any other way out of the room.
At that, the Knight steps away from the door, drags the thief, and slams it shut. He then starts emptying flasks of acid in to the lock while the thief shoved lockpicks and daggers in to it, as well as under the door (as it opened outwards) all the while the mage is heating the metal.
I'm pretty sure this was the BBEG, as the DM had a big detailed description of his hulking armoured figure and how he gives off this overwhelming sense of evil and a magical aura far beyond that of our mage.
The DM called the session there. Welp.[/QUOTE]
Prepare for a monstrously deformed, burnt husk of a man in armor to come to visit retribution upon you for that.
[QUOTE=DeeCeeTeeBee;43283794]Uh. Okay.
I think we just killed off our BBEG early. We entered the "boss room," which was locked with a huge door that we had no chance of breaking down and our thief rolled a natural 20 picking the thing. We entered, BBEG laughs and insults us, and then our "knight" (who is a huge coward and a complete asshole - think prince Charming from Shrek) has a quick look at the room. No windows, no doors, and having rolled a 20 (and having both an elf and a dwarf who didn't notice anything out of the ordinary with the walls, so no secret doors) the DM states that there doesn't appear to be any other way out of the room.
At that, the Knight steps away from the door, drags the thief, and slams it shut. He then starts emptying flasks of acid in to the lock while the thief shoved lockpicks and daggers in to it, as well as under the door (as it opened outwards) all the while the mage is heating the metal.
I'm pretty sure this was the BBEG, as the DM had a big detailed description of his hulking armoured figure and how he gives off this overwhelming sense of evil and a magical aura far beyond that of our mage.
The DM called the session there. Welp.[/QUOTE]
Simply amazing. That's my favourite shit about D&D that you can do stuff like this and sometimes it can just work out because you thought outside of the box.
[QUOTE=DeeCeeTeeBee;43283794]Uh. Okay.
I think we just killed off our BBEG early. We entered the "boss room," which was locked with a huge door that we had no chance of breaking down and our thief rolled a natural 20 picking the thing. We entered, BBEG laughs and insults us, and then our "knight" (who is a huge coward and a complete asshole - think prince Charming from Shrek) has a quick look at the room. No windows, no doors, and having rolled a 20 (and having both an elf and a dwarf who didn't notice anything out of the ordinary with the walls, so no secret doors) the DM states that there doesn't appear to be any other way out of the room.
At that, the Knight steps away from the door, drags the thief, and slams it shut. He then starts emptying flasks of acid in to the lock while the thief shoved lockpicks and daggers in to it, as well as under the door (as it opened outwards) all the while the mage is heating the metal.
I'm pretty sure this was the BBEG, as the DM had a big detailed description of his hulking armoured figure and how he gives off this overwhelming sense of evil and a magical aura far beyond that of our mage.
The DM called the session there. Welp.[/QUOTE]
Congratulations, you murdered a guy because he looked evil.
[QUOTE=Mastahamma;43284188]Congratulations, you murdered a guy because he looked evil.[/QUOTE]
well he did insult them
in D&D logic that's more than enough reason to kill them, their entire family and then raise them all as zombies.
[QUOTE=elowin;43277450]he's probably using the handy haversack listed at the top :v:
also
what[/QUOTE]
I can memorize any wizard spells, I don't have to pick a few available each level.
I still have a limited amount of course, like
0th: 5+1
1st: 4+1
2nd: 3+1
3rd: 2+1
[QUOTE=DeeCeeTeeBee;43283794]Uh. Okay.
I think we just killed off our BBEG early. We entered the "boss room," which was locked with a huge door that we had no chance of breaking down and our thief rolled a natural 20 picking the thing. We entered, BBEG laughs and insults us, and then our "knight" (who is a huge coward and a complete asshole - think prince Charming from Shrek) has a quick look at the room. No windows, no doors, and having rolled a 20 (and having both an elf and a dwarf who didn't notice anything out of the ordinary with the walls, so no secret doors) the DM states that there doesn't appear to be any other way out of the room.
At that, the Knight steps away from the door, drags the thief, and slams it shut. He then starts emptying flasks of acid in to the lock while the thief shoved lockpicks and daggers in to it, as well as under the door (as it opened outwards) all the while the mage is heating the metal.
I'm pretty sure this was the BBEG, as the DM had a big detailed description of his hulking armoured figure and how he gives off this overwhelming sense of evil and a magical aura far beyond that of our mage.
The DM called the session there. Welp.[/QUOTE]
Sort of the GM's fault for not having an escape route.
[QUOTE=Mastahamma;43284188]Congratulations, you murdered a guy because he looked evil.[/QUOTE]
Well, he detected as overwhelmingly evil to the point where our paladin had a severe headache, and our mage was shitting himself with the amount of magic pouring off of the dude. Then the guy is laughing at us and starts insulting us, going through the whole "You honestly think you can defeat me? I've fought bugbears tougher than you" and so on. That and you don't describe how spiky and generally evil a guy is and not have him be evil.
I was too busy laughing to object to the methods used to jam the door shut, but had I not been pissing myself my character probably would have actually objected to locking him in there.
Next session will likely be starting off with the door jammed and us praying this guy doesn't somehow break it down. I mean, he is magical, but the DM went to a whole lot of effort to say that the mage's spells weren't doing anything to the door and the knight's 50 ft hallway charge at the door did absolutely nothing but snap his masterwork longsword in half.
[QUOTE=DeeCeeTeeBee;43285404]That and you don't describe how spiky and generally evil a guy is and not have him be evil.[/QUOTE]
I'm totally working this into a session somehow. My second set of players lacks a BBEG anyways, so they'd probably fall for the fake one pretty easily.
[QUOTE=DeeCeeTeeBee;43285404]Well, he detected as overwhelmingly evil to the point where our paladin had a severe headache, and our mage was shitting himself with the amount of magic pouring off of the dude. Then the guy is laughing at us and starts insulting us, going through the whole "You honestly think you can defeat me? I've fought bugbears tougher than you" and so on. That and you don't describe how spiky and generally evil a guy is and not have him be evil.
I was too busy laughing to object to the methods used to jam the door shut, but had I not been pissing myself my character probably would have actually objected to locking him in there.
Next session will likely be starting off with the door jammed and us praying this guy doesn't somehow break it down. I mean, he is magical, but the DM went to a whole lot of effort to say that the mage's spells weren't doing anything to the door and the knight's 50 ft hallway charge at the door did absolutely nothing but snap his masterwork longsword in half.[/QUOTE]
you do realize that he can probably just teleport out, right?
[QUOTE=elowin;43285583]you do realize that he can probably just teleport out, right?[/QUOTE]
Ssssh. They just made their villains have like a hundred more reasons to hunt them down in the most horrible way possible. Let them find that out on their own.
So what are people's experiences in cross-gendered characters, whether if you've played one or other people at your table? I don't to it too often, but I'm currently playing a female spellslinger in one of the Bathfinder games at the college, mostly inspired because of the kick-ass art of the spellslinger ([URL="http://skepticsarah.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/spellsunger1.jpg"]here[/URL]) but also because I wanted to try something different. I'm not portraying her as overly masculine but at the same time not relying on stereotypes as gimmicks. Someone like Mulan basically. I like to think I'm doing an OK job at it since the GM green-lighted it (only specifically requesting I not do an overly feminine in-character voice since he knows I can't do one to save my life) and my fellow players didn't really bat an eye.
As for my experience of other people: Generally players I meet who play PCs of the opposite gender do it fairly well and the groups were super cool with it. I've only seen maybe three times when players would rely on stereotypes of the opposite gender to play their characters, twice it was guys playing as women, and once vice versa.
i play girls in video games because why not, but when i do rp i gotta be a dude cause when i really try to rp, i go HARD, and it gets weird if im acting like a girl all the time
[QUOTE=LiquidNazgul;43285881]So what are people's experiences in cross-gendered characters, whether if you've played one or other people at your table? I don't to it too often, but I'm currently playing a female spellslinger in one of the Bathfinder games at the college, mostly inspired because of the kick-ass art of the spellslinger ([URL="http://skepticsarah.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/spellsunger1.jpg"]here[/URL]) but also because I wanted to try something different. I'm not portraying her as overly masculine but at the same time not relying on stereotypes as gimmicks. Someone like Mulan basically. I like to think I'm doing an OK job at it since the GM green-lighted it (only specifically requesting I not do an overly feminine in-character voice since he knows I can't do one to save my life) and my fellow players didn't really bat an eye.
As for my experience of other people: Generally players I meet who play PCs of the opposite gender do it fairly well and the groups were super cool with it. I've only seen maybe three times when players would rely on stereotypes of the opposite gender to play their characters, twice it was guys playing as women, and once vice versa.[/QUOTE]
i crossplay pretty much all the time but it doesn't usually end up as a plot point.
[QUOTE=LiquidNazgul;43285881]So what are people's experiences in cross-gendered characters, whether if you've played one or other people at your table? I don't to it too often, but I'm currently playing a female spellslinger in one of the Bathfinder games at the college, mostly inspired because of the kick-ass art of the spellslinger ([URL="http://skepticsarah.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/spellsunger1.jpg"]here[/URL]) but also because I wanted to try something different. I'm not portraying her as overly masculine but at the same time not relying on stereotypes as gimmicks. Someone like Mulan basically. I like to think I'm doing an OK job at it since the GM green-lighted it (only specifically requesting I not do an overly feminine in-character voice since he knows I can't do one to save my life) and my fellow players didn't really bat an eye.
As for my experience of other people: Generally players I meet who play PCs of the opposite gender do it fairly well and the groups were super cool with it. I've only seen maybe three times when players would rely on stereotypes of the opposite gender to play their characters, twice it was guys playing as women, and once vice versa.[/QUOTE]
I once played a girl who was raised male so vehemently by an abusive, heir-desparate father. But maybe that's not what you meant.
[QUOTE=LiquidNazgul;43285881]So what are people's experiences in cross-gendered characters, whether if you've played one or other people at your table? I don't to it too often, but I'm currently playing a female spellslinger in one of the Bathfinder games at the college, mostly inspired because of the kick-ass art of the spellslinger ([URL="http://skepticsarah.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/08/spellsunger1.jpg"]here[/URL]) but also because I wanted to try something different. I'm not portraying her as overly masculine but at the same time not relying on stereotypes as gimmicks. Someone like Mulan basically. I like to think I'm doing an OK job at it since the GM green-lighted it (only specifically requesting I not do an overly feminine in-character voice since he knows I can't do one to save my life) and my fellow players didn't really bat an eye.
As for my experience of other people: Generally players I meet who play PCs of the opposite gender do it fairly well and the groups were super cool with it. I've only seen maybe three times when players would rely on stereotypes of the opposite gender to play their characters, twice it was guys playing as women, and once vice versa.[/QUOTE]
Honestly, don't worry about the gender/sex you chose and trying to fit into a 'frame' or 'mindset'. Just play and roleplay it like you would any other character. It's only if you make some huge unnecessary deal out of it that it would be awkward and stupid and cause issues.
I play girls in almost all my campaigns just because I like playing female characters, but in pretty much every case it's just a case of 'this is a character who happens to be female' as opposed to someone who is defined by their gender and all that
unless the campaign or specific concept is really focused around that being an important thing, of course. But usually, I don't consider gender as part of how my characters act any more than I would any other facet of the character
It's part of them but it's not the only or most important part, basically
Yeah, looking at the sheets I have, it's pretty much a 50:50 split on gender.
Well, more like 48:48 since constructs don't really have a gender
[QUOTE=SiberysTranq;43286363]I play girls in almost all my campaigns just because I like playing female characters, but in pretty much every case it's just a case of 'this is a character who happens to be female' as opposed to someone who is defined by their gender and all that
unless the campaign or specific concept is really focused around that being an important thing, of course. But usually, I don't consider gender as part of how my characters act any more than I would any other facet of the character
It's part of them but it's not the only or most important part, basically[/QUOTE]
this sums up my opinion well.
I don't play girls 'cause they're icky and full of cooties ew
Seriously though, practicing characters with other genders is interesting to see how flexible you can get with creating dynamic characters. Personally, I'd like to see a whole bunch of dudebro tropes applied to a female character in a serious setting, but I've never had the chance to try it.
The only thing that changes rp-wise whenever I play a girl is that "Punch her in the cunt" changes to "Punch him in the dick"
[QUOTE=croguy;43286586]I don't play girls 'cause they're icky and full of cooties ew
Seriously though, practicing characters with other genders is interesting to see how flexible you can get with creating dynamic characters. Personally, I'd like to see a whole bunch of dudebro tropes applied to a female character in a serious setting, but I've never had the chance to try it.[/QUOTE]
That's basically what my viking-pirate ranger was like.
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