Stop PERFORMING and Start ROLE PLAYING

2024 ж. 18 Ақп.
275 037 Рет қаралды

Want to learn how to role play? Want your TTRPG experience to be more immersive like @criticalrole or @dimension20show? STOP trying to be a performer and START being a ROLE PLAYER.
#criticalrole #dimension20 #dnd #ttrpg #roleplay

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  • The point about rules-lite RPGs is important. Simplicity isn’t a virtue by itself; the game needs to be simple in *ways that matter* and complicated in *ways that matter*. I will always point to AD&D 1e: it has comparatively simple character systems nested in complicated and robust campaign management systems. The best games trying to simulate something are able to figure out which mechanics ought to be complex and which should be streamlined.

    @johnnmcgowan@johnnmcgowan2 ай бұрын
    • pinned for the midwits

      @blacklodgegames@blacklodgegames2 ай бұрын
    • I'm sorry, sir; I can't reach that far up... 😢@@blacklodgegames

      @euansmith3699@euansmith36992 ай бұрын
    • At the risk of outing myself as a midwit, I feel like this might be a good video topic all itself@@blacklodgegames

      @gregoryspurgeon8974@gregoryspurgeon89742 ай бұрын
    • SWADE is far better

      @elgatochurro@elgatochurro2 ай бұрын
    • I agree that rules don't mean less roleplaying, but I don't think people should interpret that as "don't ever play rules-lite games" either. I have been looking into some fun looking games, that lean more rules-lite, such as Cairn, Mausritter, and some others. Cairn especially seems perfect for something like a one-shot with a group who has never played an RPG before and isn't ready to commit to learning a whole rulebook. But also if your group wants to try something out a new genre like SciFi without having to learn Traveller or the Star Wars RPG yet, there's hacks of Cairn in different genres. Point is, definitely try other rpgs, heavy or lite rules, but don't do it just because of roleplay.

      @EyeMCreative@EyeMCreative2 ай бұрын
  • I like the idea that, when running a game, the GM wants Game of Thrones, and the players provide Monty Python and the Holy Grail.

    @euansmith3699@euansmith36992 ай бұрын
    • 😆 Immersion, you say!?

      @michaelmullenfiddler@michaelmullenfiddler2 ай бұрын
    • I went to GM school and the only videos they had was Monty Python and the Holy Grail and the Princess Bride.

      @braddoc4087@braddoc40872 ай бұрын
    • The GM sets the table, the Players throw the spaghetti.

      @Modern_Robot@Modern_Robot2 ай бұрын
    • lol. 100%.

      @solomani5959@solomani59592 ай бұрын
    • I’m not Matt Mercer. I’m not Brennan Lee Mulligan. I’m going to run a game in the manner I feel comfortable with, and if you are looking for high drama, try Shakespeare in the park.

      @davidraley3054@davidraley30542 ай бұрын
  • Long ago, I created an (initially) background NPC character who was a paladin. Players were in a boat. The boat began sinking during a storm, and I thought right on the spot that the most believable thing that character could do was to prioritize everyone's safety before his own. He put the players on a lifeboat as water slowly dragged him down because he had been running around rescuing people in heavy armor. The one single phrase the players ever heard from him was "Go! Save yourselves!" before he pushed them away from the wreckage, as there wasn't enough space for him to get in the lifeboat too. All players kept trying to figure out from which temple that paladin had come, so they could bring offerings and tell the clerics what had happened. One of them became a paladin later on just because of that NPC. He ended up becoming a major NPC posthumously. One of my best bite-sized role-play moments, and all it took was to 'be' the guy for two minutes.

    @ammygamer@ammygamer2 ай бұрын
  • I only managed to get this kind of immersion fully once when playing, and not to be over dramatic or anything, but I think being able to become that character actually changed me as a person. She was outgoing and optimistic, I wasn’t. Playing her made me more confident in myself, more willing to take risks, and helped me understand myself in a way I never had before. I loved that character, and she made me love myself a little more too.

    @baconmoop@baconmoop2 ай бұрын
    • This is EXACTLY the thing why I love D&D and role-playing games!! I have a transgender character whose deity is Lathander: god of "new beginnings." ThIs character holds a special place in my heart, for he's helping me accept my gender identity. He transitions while I'm transitioning. This character and his deities relationship brings me the most amount of inner peace I've ever felt in my life. I cannot thank my fictional D&D character enough for helping me along the way.

      @Dreamy_Sheepy@Dreamy_Sheepy2 ай бұрын
    • @@Dreamy_Sheepythis is so beautiful ❤ ❤❤

      @famminak852@famminak8522 ай бұрын
    • I absolutely agree, role playing a character can be really impactful! The character I played for 3 years is very different from me and very flawed, but I love her.

      @meganreilly9944@meganreilly99442 ай бұрын
    • This is beautiful ❤

      @yupyup5895@yupyup58952 ай бұрын
    • This reminds me of my own dnd character, who is a bit of a self insert but as I'm painfully shy, never willing to take risks, afraid to talk to people, she is extroverted, doesn't know shame, dives head first in all sort of things, shows a lot of affection towards her friends... It's fun playing her

      @cervanera2228@cervanera22282 ай бұрын
  • Take this scene for example, cuts to an ad where a demon lady brands a guy's ass.

    @hjalmarthehelmetman@hjalmarthehelmetman2 ай бұрын
    • 😂😂😂😂

      @kohakuaiko@kohakuaiko2 ай бұрын
    • Ah I see you too are bombarded by hero wars ads that make you wish for blindness

      @dragonthumbs7727@dragonthumbs77272 ай бұрын
    • @@dragonthumbs7727 brain-bleach should be a thing

      @kohakuaiko@kohakuaiko2 ай бұрын
    • @@dragonthumbs7727their better than ai generated scam ads youtube forces me to watch.

      @hjalmarthehelmetman@hjalmarthehelmetman2 ай бұрын
    • Peasants with your ads… *pulls out pockets to reveal nothing but lint*

      @Stertzwalker@StertzwalkerАй бұрын
  • That Sir Ian McKellen clip should be required watching for all actors and roleplayers alike.

    @Parodox306@Parodox3062 ай бұрын
    • From a series called Extras. 100% binge worthy.

      @sequoyahwright@sequoyahwright2 ай бұрын
    • We will give you a script...but it must be memorized by opening night. There will be no scripts on stage opening night.

      @kereymckenna4611@kereymckenna46112 ай бұрын
    • Much agreement there. A little bit of "acting" is okay when paying a RPG, but this table- dramatic crap is nothing short than embarrassing! Especially when everyone starts pretending they're in a Monty Python skit.

      @user-es8pq1mz1r@user-es8pq1mz1r2 ай бұрын
    • I am NOT in fact a wizard...@@kereymckenna4611

      @crzyprplmnky@crzyprplmnky2 ай бұрын
    • @@user-es8pq1mz1r Sadly, I have had to eject players who could not read the table and restrain their Python/Princess Bride/Firefly/et al. quotes during dramatic game moments. I have no problem at all with using quotes from anything if they are appropriate to the moment. Bathos is low hanging fruit, and irresistible to some people.

      @sequoyahwright@sequoyahwright2 ай бұрын
  • The thing is Brennan and Matt have come out and said multiple times "Look. We come from various levels of acting and improv. Of course our games are going to look and sound better... but that's not what is important. The important part is who we're playing with. Our friends. Don't play like we do it. Unless you can make it work. If so great. But just have fun. However you can with the world building and mechanics of D&D and other TTRPG systems." Not exactly that. But the fact they've said something even close to that is really good to hear.

    @shepardren8006@shepardren80062 ай бұрын
    • That's why I don't see the "Matt Mercer Effect" as something bad per se, because the people being annoyed by "new players trying to have the Critical Role experience" are just complaining about one side of a medal. To me, the "Mett Mercer Effect" also has another side, like bringing more players to the table, creating new DMs, inventions of new system. DnD and TTRPG were always somewhere on the side-lines, and CR just had the right chemistry at the right time to bring everything from the sideline into everyone's line of sight. May they be actors, experienced LARPers or just enthusiastic players, they might bring more immersion to the table than anyone who just wants to "replay CR/D20" People saw a group of friends having fun and sharing amazing stories together, and wanted to have the same experience, but to have the same experience, they would need to be part of that group, because, like you quoted, you can't have the SAME experience. If your group get's a similar experience naturally, that's awesome, but you can't force it, and if you try to do so, you'll probably end up with destroying the whole experience with every participant being annoyed or disappointed.

      @MikaeruDaiTenshi@MikaeruDaiTenshi2 ай бұрын
    • ​@MikaeruDaiTenshi the primary reason I haven't gotten into dnd and just watch Matt, Smosh's, or Viva La Dirt Leagues is because all I see and hear are seasoned players complaining about new players. It's like you can't please them at all, they're only gonna be shitty and criticize you for being new and I hate that shit.

      @Jagger-Tyr_13@Jagger-Tyr_132 ай бұрын
    • @@Jagger-Tyr_13 To be fair, I wanted to play for ages and only started playing in 2021 or something like that. - My first two sessions where kinda rough, because I wasn't that fit with the rules yet. Most other sessions I than occasionally rules-lawyered* because half the people didn't care to learn anything about the rules, even though they already had played before, had made randomized characters and seemingly didn't even look at their sheet prior to the game once, or had troubles finding the sheet at all. - Our group even tried to stream it on twitch (we played over discord), and, while we might have had our fun, nobody in their right mind would have watched it, as it was a complete mess half of the time. Some of us try to do voices, but I don't think we do this to "be like" the known professionals, rather than to distinguish between In-Character and Out-of-Character Talk. Also it simply gives more flavor or "character" to the character. So we encourage people joining us to do so, but we don't force them. Some older players might hate new players because they see them as invaders, trying to have the same experience as them, but with different values and ideals. Just like some seasoned players hate online-ttrpg saying they'll only play in person. I mean, you'll find players saying "theater of the mind" is the only way / best way to play and despise actual maps (doesn't matter if built by hand or digitally) So, yea. You just have to find the right people to do it. One of the reasons I don't play a lot, is because my group of friends I play with, are difficult to schedule with, and I don't really want to play with strangers. - If you don't have a problem playing with strangers, the best course of action is to go on discord of DnDBeyond or any other DnD or even other TTRPG-System's discord and look there. Or at your local tabletop-game stores. But sure, you can also just watch others play. *(just pointing out for the rules-lawyer haters out there, that I was even asked by our DM to do so, because he didn't have a good grasp of the rules either, so whenever he was unsure, I either knew the answer or quickly looked it up, and ofc, when he still wanted to rule something different, then that's what we went with)

      @MikaeruDaiTenshi@MikaeruDaiTenshi2 ай бұрын
    • People acting like Critical Role invented trope characters, as though "horny bard" and "fireball wizard" weren't pillars of how the game evolved. I will say though, people don't play Jester right. A happy go lucky magic caster is either meant to be new and bright eyed, or absolutely insane. Look at characters like Doctor Who's Toymaker. Or Supernatural's Gabriel. It's not "lolsorandom" it's either a coping mechanism or a sense of innocence to be protected as long as possible.

      @AnonYmous-mc5zx@AnonYmous-mc5zx2 ай бұрын
    • @@AnonYmous-mc5zx To be fair, characters from tv-shows are mostly fully developed and written my (mostly) professional writers, so it's easy to have them be a specific way, while in TTRPG, you're mostly improvising and your rolls may turn your specific idea into something else, so actual written characters seem less random. - As for CR-Characters, their players are (voice) actors, so they at least have a professional feeling on how their character would do stuff and evolve. (which is the part most "newcomers" don't realise) Also, the "CR Character trope" is just a natural evolution. THere are many MANY players that just try to recrate existing characters, doesn't matter if they're from CR, or LotR, Avatar, Naruto, Dragonball, Witcher, Robin Hood, Arthur, Marvel/DC, and so on and so on. Those "tropes" will always exist, and there will always be new ones. With Critical role, it was just easier because the actualy character builds were already written.

      @MikaeruDaiTenshi@MikaeruDaiTenshi2 ай бұрын
  • As an actor and gamer, this is all so accurate. A lesson I learned during my time performing improv, was don’t try to be funny. Don’t TRY to make a moment happen. Be honest. LISTEN. Support the others involved with you. From that, a genuine performance will develop, one that is often amusing, and sometimes heartbreaking. The MOST emotional scene I ever performed in school was improvised on the spot, turned into three separate scenes that wove back and forth showing snippets from three points in time, and it was incredible. The whole room was in tears. And it all started because I reached for my keys on my belt, didn’t have them, so I made a different choice. Don’t force something, just feel it.

    @user-jt1js5mr3f@user-jt1js5mr3f2 ай бұрын
    • I would love to hear more about that performance if you’d like to share!

      @halgaucher6730@halgaucher6730Ай бұрын
  • This reminds me a lot of "The C Team" on Penny Arcade from several years ago. The DM in that group had a very low-energy style. He didn't put on accents or go in for dramatic narration, but he ALWAYS played his characters straight. And I remember being really impressed that no matter how chaotic the party acted, or how outlandish the story got, the DM could always sell it in the end because he never stopped being sincere.

    @lordmcsmith@lordmcsmith2 ай бұрын
    • I find that people mostly like to explore funky places and make meaningful choices in there. They like discovering how much freedom they have. Anything I say is probably partial or possibly imperfect information, but asking more questions is free. People have fun when they figure out they don't have to wait on me, they can lift barrels and knock around the wall. Sometimes it's not worth interacting in detail with every dang person. A lot of people in town aren't going to be that interesting. Every ten minute spent trying to wring something out of them is time not spent exploring the unknown. You can only chat with so many stablehands before it gets old.

      @SusCalvin@SusCalvin2 ай бұрын
    • sincerity is one half, but credibility is the other.

      @themadmallard@themadmallardАй бұрын
    • in a similar vein, god bless DM Timmy for holding afloat the WKUK DnD shitshow like that lmao. RIP Trevor Moore. Goodnight to the Town Sexpot, gone but never forgotten

      @JN-so6wt@JN-so6wtАй бұрын
  • It's pretty appropriate for Blanche, because the character itself often seems to be "putting on a show" for others, she herself is theatrical.

    @isaacpriestley@isaacpriestley2 ай бұрын
    • Agreed, casting is perfect, not a knock on Vivian Leigh who I stan

      @blacklodgegames@blacklodgegames2 ай бұрын
    • Indeed, it's a good match for the character. That's one of the brilliances of the movie, even the actors' acting styles are from different worlds, just as Blanch and Stanley are from different worlds.

      @lordofentropy@lordofentropy2 ай бұрын
  • But don't forget Blanche herself is putting on a performance. Her whole thing is trying to put on an illusion to the people around her. That's what Stanley clocks immediately.

    @asterianyc@asterianyc2 ай бұрын
    • Correct. I love Leigh and she was one of the greats of her era.

      @blacklodgegames@blacklodgegames2 ай бұрын
  • There is nothing quite like being with a group of people who can be fully immersed in their characters. I still remember so many moments from a campaign I did 6 years ago because everyone was so into being their characters. It's unfortunate that in most games I've played since moving there has always been at least one or two players determined to have no semblance of immersion either because they are irony poisoned or because they refuse to read the rules and have to ask questions every 15 minutes.

    @TheKindofTiredSleepCantFix@TheKindofTiredSleepCantFix2 ай бұрын
    • Many such cases!

      @blacklodgegames@blacklodgegames2 ай бұрын
    • I've had few games where the whole session was like this, but many moments across many games. One of the most memorable though, was when my party was caught in a big stand off in a grave yard between six different factions, and about 60+ enemies on the other side, who were all enemies with each other as well. Tension was high, the Pc's were trapped in a crypt, and various heads of those enemy parties were trying to negotiate for them to come out. One of them called to the group, and tired of their games, they said that they should give up the macguffin, and "Surrender! Only fools would think they could win against so many foes. Surrender and we will let you go free." My party looked at each other, and burst out laughing as one. And the thing that makes it most memorable to me, was that they were laughing in character. I don't how to convey it, but for a moment, it wasn't my friends and family members there at the table, it was a rag tag group of adventurers too crazy to even think about surrender for a second, laughing in the face of death. I know all those people, and those weren't their laughs. Somehow we were all keyed into the same magic moment, briefly transported to another place and time. It was great. Then I had an enemy wizard cast erupting earth on the doorway of the crypt, and the ceiling collapsed on their heads, and I ran the most intense combat of my DMing career. Six factions, 60+ enemies, all fighting the PC's and each other, with multiple high level casters and a fight that ended up going across three sessions, teleporting to five locations, featured two armies, a kraken, a fleet of cloud giants, an ancient gold dragon, and a crowd of mermaids. They won, and somehow no one died, it was amazing.

      @Lurklen@Lurklen2 ай бұрын
    • @@Lurklen That's the tightest shit I've ever heard.

      @Drekromancer@Drekromancer2 ай бұрын
    • @@Drekromancer It is a singular moment in my time as a DM, and nothing as yet has matched it, but some things have come close. Sometimes things just click like that, and suddenly a great moment is unlocked.

      @Lurklen@Lurklen2 ай бұрын
  • "you need to realize what you are doing is not a performance for others, but an exercise in imagination for yourself." Aaaaaand subbed

    @algetzzdoobie@algetzzdoobie2 ай бұрын
    • Yes that's the moment I subbed too

      @williamschwarzer3701@williamschwarzer37012 ай бұрын
    • Yarp

      @RedEarthTaxidermy@RedEarthTaxidermy2 ай бұрын
    • Oh, this is why I sometimes can get in character and sometimes can't.

      @lemurpotatoes7988@lemurpotatoes7988Ай бұрын
  • That moment when your character does or says something you yourself didn't even think of doing or saying is when you know you've "done it right". Such an amazing feeling for you and such a surprise for your fellow players

    @Mama.Cadence@Mama.Cadence2 ай бұрын
  • It's so, so hard to get my players to WANT to learn the rules well enough for any of this.

    @GeekMasterGames@GeekMasterGames2 ай бұрын
    • Choose a different game system. There are plenty that aren't ridiculous tomes that cost $100.

      @MollyGermek@MollyGermek2 ай бұрын
    • It's because most game systems are needlessly overcomplicated, full of rules requiring errata, and people have real lives that require their time. You choose to be a DM that's your choice. You shouldn't expect everyone at the table to share your obsessive need to memorize every rule.

      @ZiddersRooFurry@ZiddersRooFurry2 ай бұрын
    • Agree with @MollyGermek and @ZiddlersRooFurry. And disagree with this video saying rules-lite has nothing to do with this. The fewer rules to master, the easier the path to mastery. The trick is to find a good match between your group and a rules set. Before our current campaign, I ran 5 one-shots, each in a different system. We voted to play Cyberpunk Red. Just crunchy enough to support tactical combat on a grid, but it plays fast and furious once you master the rules. It all depends on your group. If they don’t need minis and tactical combat, that opens up a lot more game choices. But that’s not my group.

      @MrNhoj509@MrNhoj5092 ай бұрын
    • ​@@ZiddersRooFurryhot damn, dial it back a bit on that projection why don't you? What's up with saying the guy has an obsession because you read a single harmless comment? There's nothing obsessive about wanting your players to learn the game, when you're a gm devoting hours of your free time to bring fun to your group. Your aggression came out of nowhere.

      @GeeGe.@GeeGe.2 ай бұрын
    • @@ZiddersRooFurry why are ppl so agressive over this? geez

      @rafaelverolla7276@rafaelverolla7276Ай бұрын
  • This is so very valid. Normal role playing game sessions should be more about the player engaging in the game, THROUGH their character, and less about the player "acting" LIKE their character. I encourage my players to use the first person when saying what they are doing, like "I climb the wall" instead of saying "Torgus climbs the wall." I'm more focused on encouraging the players to BE in the headspace as their character, and less focused on them doing any voice acting and performance.

    @BillAllanWorld@BillAllanWorld2 ай бұрын
    • So for me the question is- are you good with BOTH. The player becomes the character with their accent (good or bad) and that's how they embrace the character? I was a daycare teacher for a few years and I've been a mom for over a decade, and a babysitter & older sibling & cousin even longer. I've always given each character their own voice in kids books, and even in my head when I read they each have a voice- the curse their is I have a hard time listening to audio books if the reader's voice doesn't match what the book character sounds like in my head if I've already read some of the series. (I.E. the Critical Role books read by the CR cast that voiced the characters initially are GREAT and Robbie Daymond's voice is calm, soothing, and still engaging. I've also listened to the "Infinity Reaper" series he reads with a couple other people and the 3 main characters have different voices and are covered by the different readers. I enjoy that, others don't care for it. However, I've been reading Janet Evanovich's Stephanie Plum series for about 10 years and I CAN NOT listen to them on audible because the reader doesn't match my brain's version of "Stephanie" so I have to find something else to play on long trips, those have to be physical books for me.)

      @m.robinson5331@m.robinson5331Ай бұрын
    • @@m.robinson5331 short answer, yes - if a player enjoys acting and voicing their character, then certainly I would welcome them to do so in the game. But if someone wasn’t interested or capable of acting or voicing their character, I would want them to just play the game and not worry about being a performer. Make sense?

      @BillAllanWorld@BillAllanWorldАй бұрын
    • holy shit Bill Allan! Your DnD with high school students series got me into DnD, thank you !

      @parkertower1605@parkertower160526 күн бұрын
  • To be honest, Ive met method actors - actual performing arts students - who half do this. A lot of the times it seems some of them are exaggerating their characters into ways they don't really make sense. But one thing I'll give them in the least their characters remain within their consistency range of sorts.

    @sgshaday@sgshaday2 ай бұрын
    • It's part of stage presence I think. When you are a small spot seen from a back bench, you must make yourself and your actions larger. People on a stage can't afford small motions and gestures.

      @SusCalvin@SusCalvin2 ай бұрын
    • Yeah, I second what SusCalvin said. It's a habit from theatre. The audience is far away from you, so you have to exaggerate to express emotion to the intended effect. If you're being filmed or acting for people that can properly see you (as in most ttrpg scenarios), you have to be more subtle. It's why a lot of movie actors without experience struggle with theatre or even voice acting (and the other way around of course). Both is acting but it's a very different practice.

      @goji253@goji2532 ай бұрын
    • @@goji253 It feels a bit like old silent movies, but then they have no words. Everything Chaplin wants to say he has to say with his gestures and expressions. No one actually moves and gestures like characters in a Chaplin movie.

      @SusCalvin@SusCalvin2 ай бұрын
    • @SusCalvin Not entirely sure. At least from my experience, yes, they had done theater as part of their courses, but they had also done film - as part of their courses. I think - and this is mere speculation here - it's the idea of a captive audience. Even when they're not the DM, they know they have an audience there and honestly tend to take a lot of time to "present" their characters. At times, it becomes less about, following the plot points, finding out who did what, checking out a dungeon, and so on, and more about that character presentation. They're great actors, for sure, and to be fair, some do learn to share that spotlight with the more quiet ones that then are encouraged to take part in the story. But at times, their good acting can interfere with a lot of other things. As for the exaggerated aspects, I'm not entirely sure if it's tied to that.

      @sgshaday@sgshaday2 ай бұрын
    • Dude I've played in D&D game where a party member just randomly blocked off half the party from getting involved in a fight, because they didn't want to share the experience with anyone else. The DM just gave a shrug, like, 'I dunno'. I genuinely don't think I could ever be bothered by someone roleplaying too hard. I've noticed that there are two kinds of people who interact with this style of fantasy / escapism: The people who want to get immersed and roleplay, and the people who want to feel powerful and construct every character they have around that. I would gladly pick the first kind of person over the second, any day.

      @KarazolaX@KarazolaXАй бұрын
  • "It is not from the benevolence of the fighter, the ranger, or the cleric, that we expect our verisimilitude, but from their regard to their own interest." -Adam Smith, probably.

    @PsychicAlchemy@PsychicAlchemy2 ай бұрын
    • "From each PC according to their ability, to each Character Class according to their need" - Carl Marks

      @Smittumi@Smittumi2 ай бұрын
  • Hearing that you've done voice over work honestly makes perfect sense now with how well you've done these vids now.

    @natanaelalvarez4754@natanaelalvarez47542 ай бұрын
    • I was a full blown theatre kid (I got better)

      @blacklodgegames@blacklodgegames2 ай бұрын
  • I had a moment at a game last week where my experienced players were rightly terrified to interact with a strange NPC (because they understand the rules of the system and how fragile their PCs are) but the new guy hadn't figures this all out yet (his 2nd game ever). His character acted in opposition of their concern and later he hung around after everyone had left to complain that he wanted more action out of the scenes. I tried to explain to him that none of the characters are heroes and multiple PCs have met their end LARPing as heroic characters until players realized we aren't playing Saturday morning cartoons the RPG. We're playing outsmart the invulnerable minotaur and escape with the McGuffin before bull cultists sacrifice us to the chaos gods.

    @daelusraine2989@daelusraine29892 ай бұрын
    • let me guess, mork borg?

      @MrCywil@MrCywil2 ай бұрын
    • @@MrCywil no sir. Shadowdark/Cyclopedia

      @daelusraine2989@daelusraine29892 ай бұрын
    • Maybe your players need to realise, how their characters don't know the rules and genre of the game? I see a lot of opposites: 1. Players act like their characters know, they are replacable. 2. Players are terrified of something happening to the character, so they are overly cautious and try to exploit ther´ir knowledge of genre and narrative structure. What you want is: Character reralistically goes about the one life they have. (At least in most settings. My Pokémon players know, I will not kill them so fast, because we are going for slightly more grown up slapstick anime.)

      @Haexxchen@Haexxchen2 ай бұрын
    • To be fair - there are plenty of systems out there where you can be the tough guy from the get go and also enjoy it. And I think this is completely fine. RPGs are escapism and sometimes you just want to be the strong barbarian who smashes face on every occasion.

      @Brainfracture@Brainfracture2 ай бұрын
    • @@Brainfracture I don't disagree. We play a bunch of different ones and I was clear with the him on the tone of the game and the scope as well. I essentially told him that I'll be running something later that'd be more in line with his taste. He understood.

      @daelusraine2989@daelusraine29892 ай бұрын
  • I remember a time we were playing a game that was a light-hearted sci-fi space setting that was pretty heavily focused on the comedic / ridiculous aspects of our games. However, there was one person who either didn't understand that, or wasn't told it properly to the GM. He made a very serious character, and started to get bothered and take on out of the game. We ended up having to stop the game, and tell him. "Well, how was I supposed to know that the game wasn't gonna be serious?" He asked. "Dude." One of us chimed in. "The currency in the game is called 'Space Bucks.'"

    @KarazolaX@KarazolaX2 ай бұрын
    • Had the opposite experience for me, our group usually plays standard, fantasy setting(not to gritty, not to funhearted) but we usually make it more lighthearted in the end because of player antics. So I wanted to make a comic relief one game and made a chunnibyou, completely exaggerated, sorcerer with a loving family, and other than delusions of grandeur, a completely jovial happy(if a bit cowardly despite a tough act) person who is chaotic good. Of course, this was the campaign where I forgot to join the preplanning discord call, and completely miss the small detail of this campaign being a gritty, dark, cesspit located in the deep dark belly of the underdark. My guy was not ready for cannibalism and having to craft makeshift weapons out of enemies bones.

      @drunkenthoughts6072@drunkenthoughts6072Ай бұрын
  • Players don't decide what happens, they say what they attempt to do, and the DM says what happens. The biggest hurdle in roleplaying is coming up with how your character would act, and being consistent. It's really easy to react like you normally would, and it's difficult to react like someone else would.

    @sleepinggiant4062@sleepinggiant40622 ай бұрын
    • That is "Mother May I" roleplaying, and you are a bad gamer and bad DM if this is what you do and expect other players to do. Players describe actions, the DM then interprets those actions into gameable mechanics and arbitrate the consequences of those actions. I bet you are also the type of player that asks for rolls too, "Can I roll perception?" "May I roll investigation?" Be better.

      @KraftyMattKraft@KraftyMattKraft2 ай бұрын
    • @@KraftyMattKraft - Lol. Asking the player to make a roll is not mother may I DMing. You said the same thing in different words. Arbitrating consequences is saying what happens. Don't make assumptions about how I play. Your assumptions are wrong.

      @sleepinggiant4062@sleepinggiant40622 ай бұрын
    • ​@@KraftyMattKraft Look in the mirror and repeat your last line. Not only are you wrong in your belief that you know the "right" way to play, the way you talk to other people is an embarrassment to the hobby.

      @Michael-bn1oi@Michael-bn1oi2 ай бұрын
    • ​@@KraftyMattKraft So to rephrase what you just said in response to the OP,: You declare "I use stealth and burn down the village and nobody stops me". The DM asks you to roll for a stealth check to see if you succeed You chuck an almighty wobbly, go online afterwards and complain that your DM is bad because they're a 'mother may I' DM. So, I'm going to assume you're a very young person who hasn't learned how to handle RNG failure and you just want the dice to F off entirely out or your RPGs because the dice are why you can only attempt to do a thing and the DM has to say what ends up happening. All the OP left out of their sentence was the dice.

      @vapx0075@vapx00752 ай бұрын
    • @@KraftyMattKraft god you would be such a horrible player to have to dm for

      @Pumpkinmarrow@Pumpkinmarrow2 ай бұрын
  • I remember giving a speech as my paladin Simon the Templar about forty years ago; that was the first time I was really in the moment as my character but that experience has colored everything I do as a player and GM ever since. And yes, that was AD&D 1e.

    @Lemurion287@Lemurion2872 ай бұрын
  • Thank you. For years I assumed when GM'ing when I role play an NPC I was doing it for the players, screw them, I'm doing for me. That's why I GM. I love immersing myself in different NPC's personalities.

    @markcampbell4080@markcampbell40802 ай бұрын
    • Damn right

      @blacklodgegames@blacklodgegames2 ай бұрын
  • So, Sunday night was the finale of a campaign we'd been on for almost a year. My character and one of the other player's characters had backed each other up a lot throughout the entire campaign, over time slowly tending to stay closer to one another during combat, spending more time talking out of it. There was a big scene where our two characters were knocked from an airship and had to work out a way to try and save one another; my character used a spell Gust of Wind to slow the descent. At the end of the campaign, big bad defeat, my character proposed to her character and it made her cry a bit because she'd grown so attached to her character.

    @ConvictedHeart@ConvictedHeart2 ай бұрын
  • That was the best advice that I've encontered to this day. At the same time it realigned my expectations on roleplay and instructed me on how to roleplay. Thank you, I was in need of hearing this advice. I've watched many videos on how to roleplay, but none of them were as clear as this video. Keep up the awesome work!

    @yagodarkfire@yagodarkfire2 ай бұрын
    • Thanks! Share it with others looking for advice!

      @blacklodgegames@blacklodgegames2 ай бұрын
  • Well done, especially the "cart before the horse" line. Exactly!

    @DiversityDragons@DiversityDragons2 ай бұрын
  • Best RPG advice I have seen in a long time.

    @sayrebonifield4663@sayrebonifield46632 ай бұрын
    • Share it!

      @blacklodgegames@blacklodgegames2 ай бұрын
  • As a learning DM, this makes me feel so much more comfortable and excited to run my games!! I often get self conscious about looking silly and such and I've been told that I can look pretty silly at times - my players always come back though I can't wait to try and put this to use

    @thismomentfitness@thismomentfitness2 ай бұрын
  • Superb video. I come from a LARP background, which is basically character immersion for a weekend at a time and your video really nails it. Thanks for this! I am going to share with my players. :)

    @madprophetus@madprophetus2 ай бұрын
    • Please do!

      @blacklodgegames@blacklodgegames2 ай бұрын
  • I’ve watch a good amount of you guys’ content, and I have enjoyed it thoroughly, but I’ve always had the thought that I didn’t quite understand your perspective on ‘how to play’. This video finished that puzzle for me. I can not explain how great I find the concept you’ve articulated here.

    @overflownpro@overflownpro2 ай бұрын
  • This video SLAPS 🔥 Absolutley incredible advice here, and truly a takeaway many need to hear! Both as a DM AND a player, I'm constantly asking my group "WWXD?" or "What would (character's name) do?" Too often do we get caught up in theatrics and "acting right" that we cheat ourselves that immersion. Well done, BLG! 🙌🏻 This was amazing to watch!

    @TylerHyperFace@TylerHyperFace2 ай бұрын
    • Thanks!

      @blacklodgegames@blacklodgegames2 ай бұрын
  • Hear, hear. Can confirm. My best campaign thrived solely because of this. Great times.

    @DjigitDaniel@DjigitDaniel2 ай бұрын
    • Good to hear!

      @blacklodgegames@blacklodgegames2 ай бұрын
  • Thank you. You put into words what I was trying to define and describe for a long time, now. I noticed that, for some reason, players (including myself) sometimes try to "impress a third person or an invisible audience" while distancing themselves from the table and fellow players where the actual game happens. And I could never fully explain that observation or narrow down what actually happens in those moments. The clip explained a lot for me and I feel relieved and confident to relish the precious moments with everyone once more.

    @OryxArt@OryxArt2 ай бұрын
  • You have nailed it. I have been trying to explain this to people and players for decades, and here it is. Well done! Liked, Subbed, Saved, and Shared.

    @sequoyahwright@sequoyahwright2 ай бұрын
  • Loooove this video. I've been feeling a bit disillusioned with my own experience in RPGs lately, and this video unstuck something for my brain and helped me realize how hungry I was for a less performative and more "greedy" experience. Many thanks.

    @turntyle@turntyleАй бұрын
  • I remember watching my player lose track of the real world for the first time, becoming fully immersed in the conflict at hand. For me as a DM, that is the ultimate dopamine hit. 😁

    @DMofBriseras@DMofBriseras2 ай бұрын
  • I find mannerisms help me get back into the mindset of my character after a week of not playing. I dont know how brando does it with a script, i would find that so jarring. Truly a talent.

    @DiomedesRangue@DiomedesRangue2 ай бұрын
    • Exactly. But, accents, mannerism, specific vocabulary, cadence and voices should be done for you. As a function of your immersion, not as a way to put a show for the rest of the people at the table. Meaning, do them if it helps you get into the mindset to the character and not to get claps as a great "actor" or whatever. I like doing voices and accents as a GM, but I do it so its easier for everyone to understand when an NPC is talking and when I am talking, and also like I said, because I like it. As a Player, I sometimes use voices but not always.

      @GamerGarm@GamerGarm2 ай бұрын
    • @@GamerGarm yeah, I think it comes from being a GM, because it's how I transition to different character mindsets, and I just carried it over to being a player.

      @DiomedesRangue@DiomedesRangue2 ай бұрын
    • @@DiomedesRangue Agreed. I find cadence and word choice carry much more weight than accents and voices. A Knight/Paladin for me will speak formaly and will be always polite. A scoundrel will use crass and crude words and turns of phrase and be more sarcastic in general.

      @GamerGarm@GamerGarm2 ай бұрын
    • ​@@GamerGarmI agree! I dont like when players just talk like they normally do. It's very jarring to my immersion, so it's a must at my table.

      @DiomedesRangue@DiomedesRangue2 ай бұрын
    • Back in film School i had to do some acting now and then, comming from the im provisation of rpgs it was horribly hard, and feel sad for my fellowship students who had to put up with my limited acting abilities.

      @andersand6576@andersand65762 ай бұрын
  • Seriously thank you for articulating this. Hope this take permeates the ttrpg space for its own sake.

    @sneakyyoutubeguy@sneakyyoutubeguy2 ай бұрын
    • Share it around!

      @blacklodgegames@blacklodgegames2 ай бұрын
  • I grew up in the 80s and started with the Red Book, where you really didn't do much roleplaying. You just went around exploring knowing each PC had their role. I thankfully can get into my NPCs now as I did do some acting in college and such. The game is different today.

    @tomjohnson4922@tomjohnson49222 ай бұрын
    • A lot of dungeon encounters aren't going to be chatty or social. Some crabs are just going to be crabbin' around having their best crab day. You can do a lot of roleplaying and the PCs will chat between eachother but they're likely not going to chat up the crabs. A lot of challenges aren't even encounters but the environment itself. I know older urban modules could be a lot more social. Vampire the Masquerade managed to create adventures where the social connections between scheming little cliques and factions and individuals mattered. Adventuring in town means other people are constantly around you.

      @SusCalvin@SusCalvin2 ай бұрын
  • Coming across your channel really helped me come into my style as an rpg designer. Before I would do what was mechanically sound for the game I was making, but now I do that while thinking how these mechanics help the players become immersed in their characters.

    @andreasmuller4172@andreasmuller41722 ай бұрын
  • This has got to be the best video on roleplaying I have ever seen. I'll make sure to send it to MANY people... I'm sure many GMs have run into countless troubles stemming from this. But now here's a video explaing it succintly

    @hekatonikles@hekatonikles2 ай бұрын
    • Thank you and please do share it!

      @blacklodgegames@blacklodgegames2 ай бұрын
  • I knew this from 40 years of experience, but that's the clearest description I've heard. Nicely done.

    @davidswain6117@davidswain61172 ай бұрын
  • Great video! Will be on my list of videos to warch for new (and seasoned) players. Hope to see more like this from you.

    @andersand6576@andersand65762 ай бұрын
  • "There will be no scripts on the night!" - Sir Ian McKellen

    @matt00041@matt000412 ай бұрын
  • Great advice, honestly. I do put on an accent when I’m in my game sessions, but it’s mostly because I’ve found it’s easier to stay in character that way.

    @coltbusick6644@coltbusick66442 ай бұрын
  • I’m prepping to DM my first campaign but I also struggle a lot with social anxiety and stagefright the ideas in this video really helped me quiet the perfectionist in me a little, Idk how to describe it, except to say that it reminded me I’m also there to have fun and chase my own interests, that the story is COLLABORATIVE and we’re all chasing the same moments can be difficult to remember especially during prep!

    @charlotte2845@charlotte28455 күн бұрын
  • This is the my favorite RP advice. Thank you so much.

    @k_k_aisa@k_k_aisa2 ай бұрын
  • I'm so glad you started with that clip. I have been told that it's peak Crit Role, and I just watch everybody wait to play while the DM chews the scenery.

    @dundermoose@dundermoose2 ай бұрын
    • i get your point here but its also a really great scene and im sure that the other people at the table werent like "god shut up and lets roll some dice" because if they were they are the problem not the people RPing the hell out of the game. Everyone was probably having a great time enjoying seeing two idiots yell at each other while pretending to be other idiots.

      @anthonydeperino2046@anthonydeperino20462 ай бұрын
    • @@anthonydeperino2046 I actually think it's kind of an eyeroll of a scene as an audience member, though I'm sure they were very immersed. Siobhan Thompson though is an amazing example of actual play immersed acting, particularly in Fantasy High: Sophomore Year or A Crown of Candy.

      @asterianyc@asterianyc2 ай бұрын
    • @@asterianyc oh i love siobhan and i agree with you on that, the cast of D20 are pretty fantastic each in their own way but siobhan and emily take it to the next level in bringing out the emotions. but to each their own i thought it was pretty cool not like the most engaging or immersive scene but it adds flavor.

      @anthonydeperino2046@anthonydeperino20462 ай бұрын
    • @@anthonydeperino2046 I'm sure it was fun to watch, and nothing against their performances, better than I could do. I'm just saying that if my DM did that on the regular I'd be checking my phone, and life's responsibilities would probably have me bowing out after six sessions.

      @dundermoose@dundermoose2 ай бұрын
  • this a great primer for your channel that explains the philosophy well

    @Thraxis@Thraxis2 ай бұрын
  • Brilliant video as usual. Gonna definitely save it and submit to help newbies understand a thing or two before starting playing.

    @Holygarch@Holygarch2 ай бұрын
  • Great video Matt! I hope others will watch this and be inspired to chase the dragon.

    @Tablerunner@Tablerunner2 ай бұрын
    • Thanks Crispy!

      @blacklodgegames@blacklodgegames2 ай бұрын
  • I have sipped from the cup and it is why I keep coming back to the table. Thank you for this video.

    @mistaree8394@mistaree83942 ай бұрын
  • I needed this wake up call! Thank you!

    @howmanylanasarethere@howmanylanasarethere2 ай бұрын
  • Thank you!! I've always fallen headfirst into my characters, and that character immersion has made roleplaying a deep experience for me. I live for that

    @Styxintheriver@StyxintheriverАй бұрын
  • Underrated. This should have millions of views.

    @Josh-Eden@Josh-Eden2 ай бұрын
    • Share it everywhere!

      @blacklodgegames@blacklodgegames2 ай бұрын
    • ♥♥@@blacklodgegames

      @Josh-Eden@Josh-Eden2 ай бұрын
    • What exactly did you find so profound? I'm genuinely curious.

      @silverblue73@silverblue732 ай бұрын
  • I actually didn't like where you were going at first but now I've saved it to my va/acting AND D&D tips folders. Going to have my players watch this before a session.

    @Coopernicuss@Coopernicuss2 ай бұрын
    • Awesome! Thanks for sharing

      @blacklodgegames@blacklodgegames2 ай бұрын
  • Thank you! I played D&D in the late 80s and early 90s, and now the last few years have started again, and I cannot stand how so many people at the table have a "voice" for their character but no understanding of their personality or backstory. Not everyone needs a backstory and people can play how they want, but I think most people play this way because they were introduced to D&D by these dramatized shows and they don't know any other way.

    @DrDeadlifts@DrDeadlifts2 ай бұрын
    • 100% correct

      @blacklodgegames@blacklodgegames2 ай бұрын
  • A really insightful, well thought out thesis on something I struggle with. Thank you - subbed

    @Southpaw_Blue@Southpaw_BlueАй бұрын
  • You captured my feelings in a nice and clear manner. Thank you for putting into words my feelings.

    @real_mereghost@real_mereghost2 ай бұрын
  • Strangely chill vibe.

    @DrizztFan23@DrizztFan232 ай бұрын
  • Probably one of the best rpg advices i ever heard, thank you for sharing! 🐉🌠🌌

    @tirionpendragon@tirionpendragon2 ай бұрын
  • It is awesome to finally find a channel that gives proper advice. Got my sub and now to remember how I did this stuff as a kid.

    @MidnightMagpie73@MidnightMagpie732 ай бұрын
  • This video told me so many things I needed to hear. Will be spreading the good word to all my players. Thank you for this

    @chip8167@chip81672 ай бұрын
  • The best video you guys have made. This is such a relevant issue in modern roleplaying.

    @mtc8858@mtc88582 ай бұрын
  • This is the more interesting piece I've seen on the topic. Chapeau!

    @Meeeeeeeestery@Meeeeeeeestery2 ай бұрын
  • This was so well elaborated, on such an aqueous topic. Fantastic

    @hopeforthebestx@hopeforthebestx2 ай бұрын
  • This is a solid video that I can tell is full blood, ball sweat, and tears. Great job.

    @TheDave-bn2tx@TheDave-bn2tx2 ай бұрын
  • Your passion really came through in this video. 😊 You explained really well, and the examples made your words come to live. I would usually find 10 minutes to be long for a single point, but I had to watch until the end to make sure I wasn't missing any nuance.

    @aell.e@aell.e2 ай бұрын
    • Thanks!

      @blacklodgegames@blacklodgegames2 ай бұрын
  • I don't have anything to type out on this topic, but the approach is wonderful and has me thinking from a perspective I haven't considered. Thanks

    @buttponcho101@buttponcho1012 ай бұрын
    • Glad it was helpful! Share it with your friends!

      @blacklodgegames@blacklodgegames2 ай бұрын
  • This advice seems so obvious and common sensical, and yet, I really needed to hear it because as I DM I always felt like I was putting on a show for my players. Oddly enough we are actually supposed to be people in a world together and we weren't really doing that 100%.

    @conactionsirjohn1197@conactionsirjohn1197Ай бұрын
  • I can probably count on one hand the number of TTRPG channels that I actually enjoy. This is definitely one of them. Keep up the awesome work

    @ghostwitch644@ghostwitch6442 ай бұрын
  • I wrote a paper for my bachelor about creativity and its role in (music) education. Your points about children playing pretend and needing ‘rules’ really hits home and (kind of) confirms that my theories are applicable to way more scenarios than I had anticipated. Loved the video! I would urge everyone to dive in to theories about divergent and convergent thinking. Anyone could learn a thing or two about how we put ourselves in ‘creative’ scenarios.

    @Qynth@Qynth2 ай бұрын
  • Great video - thank you!

    @PeterRoeck@PeterRoeck2 ай бұрын
  • Been waiting for this video for a while and ive watched it several times already! Really appreciating how these videos have been putting to words a lot of feelings and truths about rpgs and roleplaying that ive felt for a long time! Great video as always!

    @natanaelalvarez4754@natanaelalvarez47542 ай бұрын
    • Thanks!

      @blacklodgegames@blacklodgegames2 ай бұрын
  • This is the best single piece of advice for players I’ve ever heard!

    @iPivo@iPivo2 ай бұрын
  • As a dude who watches maybe “too much” ttrpg KZhead, this is top tier useful.

    @outercow1@outercow1Ай бұрын
  • One of the things that helps me get a little more immersed is NOT to try to do a voice, especially something that I'm not really familiar with, and knowing as much as I can about that character and what they want or are doing at the time. What they want. Those things that a lot of people skip when they make a character.

    @andrewl9191@andrewl9191Ай бұрын
    • You'll probably come up with a different affect for your voice over time, but an accent really doesn't matter. You are absolutely right about focusing on who the character is

      @blacklodgegames@blacklodgegamesАй бұрын
  • Great video. Well thought out and well-presented

    @jonathanfrost8767@jonathanfrost87672 ай бұрын
  • Fantastic video. You conveyed your points very well and made me wish I had a DnD group again even more.

    @bwowzah@bwowzah29 күн бұрын
  • This is the best advice I've seen about role-playing.

    @IRDANIMAL@IRDANIMAL2 ай бұрын
    • Share it with those in need!

      @blacklodgegames@blacklodgegames2 ай бұрын
    • I will do when my podcast drops as not on any other social media.

      @IRDANIMAL@IRDANIMAL2 ай бұрын
  • Watched a couple of your video., now. They make so much sense, I wish I could subscribe more than once.

    @teoconserv9954@teoconserv99542 ай бұрын
    • Share our channel with other people and they will sub in your stead!

      @blacklodgegames@blacklodgegames2 ай бұрын
  • Fantastic advice! Thank you. I will be sharing this with my table!

    @BrendonKinsey@BrendonKinsey2 ай бұрын
    • Awesome, hope it helps!

      @blacklodgegames@blacklodgegames2 ай бұрын
  • This is much appreciated & has me thinking about how to best roleplay my wood elf monk Taalvon. Thank you!

    @321ronman@321ronman2 ай бұрын
  • This is great and really true. I feel like I just had a great session the other day because of this very thing. ❤

    @ByrdieFae@ByrdieFae2 ай бұрын
  • Absolutelly 100% agreed. I play in an ongoing campaing that i play with some friends. I created a character with a basic "generic" 6 lines background and built his characteristics as the campaing went on, becoming more and more connected with him. We tried to roleplay more than we were used to (we usually play it really gamey). There was a point that we were unable to stop a tragedy of happening. This heavly impacted my character and he became melancholic and started to undergo into, what i would say, depression. During the sessions after the event started and i imersed into my character, i noticed that i was feeling sad, very sad in fact. Some sessions later there was an interaction with another player that was the most intense roleplay i ever had. His character started talking to mine in private and we started to talk about the tragedy. He disagreed with my character about some aspects and a discussion started, it escalated and even a punch was thrown (no dice rolled, only pure roleplay). This interaction was so intense that i broke into tears during the interaction. His character was able to give a light of hope to mine and so my character was able to overcome the mental repercussions of the tragedy. I felt like a heavy weight was removed from my shoulders. That was the most intesne experience i ever had during all my life playing ttrpgs. If you have a table that has people you feel safe with and lets you roleplay, do it. Create a character that you can connect to, understand them, their feelings, and believe that you are them. You will never forget the experience of becoming them, it really is uncomparable. It is powerful.

    @NirousPlayers@NirousPlayers2 ай бұрын
  • Fully commit to the imagined world. We do it every day we go to work.

    @Azalraku@Azalraku2 ай бұрын
  • Thank you so much for this speech. It's one of the most important things about our hobby to understand

    @cringeroll@cringeroll2 ай бұрын
  • I submit this for the algorithm… and to say Thank You for the content.

    @ReustersPlace@ReustersPlace2 ай бұрын
  • Extremely well put, especially the points about the modern irony poisoning and lack of genuineness in roleplay, and the importance of the mechanical side of TTRPGs.

    @MannyNamiro@MannyNamiro2 ай бұрын
    • Thank you!

      @blacklodgegames@blacklodgegames2 ай бұрын
    • @@blacklodgegames And a cool new profile pic too.

      @MannyNamiro@MannyNamiro2 ай бұрын
  • Love it! You explain this well.

    @UURevival@UURevival2 ай бұрын
  • This is a really smart insight about immersive stories and how they are told. You guys are great.

    @whangbar@whangbar2 ай бұрын
    • Thanks!

      @blacklodgegames@blacklodgegames2 ай бұрын
  • Really good video, really good tone.

    @thewovenmantis6813@thewovenmantis68132 ай бұрын
  • This is spot on. That's exaxctly that.

    @Nolinquisitor@Nolinquisitor2 ай бұрын
  • This is honestly the best roleplaying "tips" video I've ever seen. Fantastic insights and advice. Especially the bit about knowing the rules well enough that you can just react in-character. Such a fan of that approach, though it won't be instantaneous for every game group (and some may never get there, depending on what the players' interests are in gaming, which can also be okay).

    @ColonelHazard@ColonelHazard2 ай бұрын
    • Players can learn the system through play but it will always take a little buy in and time for them to get proficient.

      @blacklodgegames@blacklodgegames2 ай бұрын
  • It seems like knowing the rules is definitely one of those "hard-to-swallow" pills at a lot of tables. Without mechanics simulating the game, it feels like success and failure is arbitrary if you can appeal to the DM's sense (or lack) of imagination. Rules also just make it easier for everyone to be on the same page about how things work (even if 5e stealth mechanics are spread across several pages) and result in a smoother experience overall. Great video!

    @Brian-mc9sl@Brian-mc9sl2 ай бұрын
  • 9:00 I definitely feel like this is a misconception people have about why one would use a rules-light system. Frankly, I think that one should only really start considering them if they're already comfortable with freeform, improvisational roleplay. I've had a good time with systems like FIST and FATE, but I've been doing tabletop and exclusively narrative play by post games for a long time. For a newer player, I'd recommend something with more hard rules to latch onto and bounce off of.

    @DoctorWhoBlue@DoctorWhoBlue2 ай бұрын
    • I like things like the simple reaction roll. I am unsure how five orcs react when a patrol of paramilitary bums drop in, I can roll and see what their gut reaction is. One of my mates had us meet a beholder and rolled reaction. All reactions from a beholder is intense hatred for every other living thing, including other beholders. The reaction roll was only to see if the beholder wanted to blast us to pieces now or later that day. It's a procedural rules system that creates fun interaction and events.

      @SusCalvin@SusCalvin2 ай бұрын
  • Great video boys!

    @mattbarninger@mattbarninger2 ай бұрын
  • Nice take and greatly constructed analysis! Thank you!

    @MauroDraco@MauroDraco2 ай бұрын
  • Thank you! Incredibly helping !!!!!

    @lucianomontalto5004@lucianomontalto50042 ай бұрын
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