Hriston
Dungeon Master of Middle-earth (He/him)
The rules of 5E give this definition of roleplaying:
That roleplaying is present throughout the game is also made clear by step 2 of the basic pattern according to which the game unfolds as given in the “How to Play” section of the rulebook's Introduction, “The players describe what they want to do.” This is the players giving voice to their roleplaying. I.e. they determine how their characters think, act, and talk and then describe to the rest of the group what they have thus determined. This is the players’ sole contribution to the game, the other two thirds of the basic pattern belonging to the DM, and is the only way that the players can be said to actually be playing the game.
Roleplaying is, literally, the act of playing out a role. In this case, it’s you as a player determining how your character thinks, acts, and talks.
The passage goes on to say that roleplaying “is a part of every aspect of the game,” and that there “are two styles you can use when roleplaying your character: the descriptive approach and the active approach.”That roleplaying is present throughout the game is also made clear by step 2 of the basic pattern according to which the game unfolds as given in the “How to Play” section of the rulebook's Introduction, “The players describe what they want to do.” This is the players giving voice to their roleplaying. I.e. they determine how their characters think, act, and talk and then describe to the rest of the group what they have thus determined. This is the players’ sole contribution to the game, the other two thirds of the basic pattern belonging to the DM, and is the only way that the players can be said to actually be playing the game.