JonnyP71
Explorer
As I would any character with any range of ability score, I wouldn't so much play the character as play the game.
There are as many ways as there are players.
For the purpose of roleplaying, no. Stats, mental or otherwise, place no limitations on how you roleplay.
My position is that solving problems is the primary challenge of a roleplaying game. Engaging with that challenge as a player is not wrong regardless of what your character's abilities are. It is simply playing the game.
This is the crux of the argument in the the thread, as people naturally play in different ways:
I play the character 1st, the game 2nd. If I have a character with 5 Int I will incorporate various suitable flaws into his persona and play them at the table to the best of my ability... for example, if I say that illiteracy is a consequence of his lack of Intelligence and we get a puzzle based on reading, then my character might just grunt and get annoyed (and I will not take part in solving it at the table). If I get hold of a map I may pretend to read it - and hold it the wrong way up. Other consequences I would consider would be slow-witted, forgetful, and/or uneducated.
I use the stats to help guide my roleplaying, and when DMing, I encourage my players to do the same, as I believe the stats should have positives and negatives beyond just the skill/combat modifiers.
On the recently discussed point regarding how the character stats compare with creature stats though, I do not believe they are comparable, and prefer to look at the issue from a more realistic viewpoint. I believe all creatures in the MM are given stats purely for the purpose of aiding the DM with any relevant saving throws and stat checks. A Bear clearly has 12 Wisdom because of excellent natural sense, and thus cannot be compared with a Human with 12 wisdom - senses work differently, a Human would get +1 on a medicine check, but a Bear could not even attempt such a check. Likewise an Ape with 6 Int is NOT more intelligent than a Human with 5 Int - a Human with 5 Int can feasibly be capable of reading/writing, though probably not very well, and thus might have a basic grasp of local history, can recognise when a spell is being cast, and might know a little about local religions. The Ape would not know about any of these, and would not be capable of knowing.
But as this thread has shown, people's opinions differ wildly.