Did Ping dare him to?I blame Pong.
Did Ping dare him to?I blame Pong.
The PCs were all level X D&D characters. I used M&M (1e, iirc, maybe 2nd) character sheets for the party that stomped them into the dirt and asked, using a magical artifact forged from glowing golden rope, if they were going to change their ways when it came to waylaying strangers.I'm pretty sure my group would have killed them, taken their stuff, and then began work on a skull-shaped stronghold in a swamp somewhere.
Not quite the same, but this reminds me of the hilarious "Captain Texas" from @jonrog1's Pulp Spycraft story hour here on this site.In our last D&D campaign, we had an enemy country's national hero modeled after Captain America (and very likely to turn on his country's leadership once he realized quite how much they were perverting his country's ideals). Considered extending that to a whole set of Avengers equivalents, but likely not to happen now.
Warforged Ftr/Sorc (or BttlSorc)
Using the basic Mage-brute theory, he takes Adamantine Body as his first level feat, maximizing Str, Con, and especially Cha. His weapon should be the spiked chain.
Instead of the Draconic Heritage & BW feats, take Infernal Heritage and Infernal Sorcerer's Howl ASAP.
Describe him as having an adamantine body, somewhat darkened by blackish-red enamel paint, with elaborate golden filigree.
That's right- he's a walking, talking LeMarchand Box, a living Lament Configuration- constructed to be an autonomous key to the gates of hell.
Like Hellboy, however, he rejects his intended destiny, and seeks to travel a different path.
About a year and a half ago I started running a campaign where the party had been gathered as agents of the Imperium because they had each woken a semi-sentient mask artifact tied to the Imperium. These were magic items that grew with them, and I said there wouldn't be a lot of other items. Also, as Maskbearers of the Imperium they can requisition any mundane equipment. The Paladin started with plate. They need horses, the local Imperial Post gives them horses. That sort of thing. And finally I use milestone/story-based leveling instead of XP for overcoming creatures.I never understood why so many DnD groups are complete murderhobos?
Great minds.5) Major Mosquito: a Brujah who was madder than a Malkavian. His broken mind thought his vampiric abilities meant he had become a superhero. Based on NEC’s The Tick.
Sounds like a breath of fresh air.About a year and a half ago I started running a campaign where the party had been gathered as agents of the Imperium because they had each woken a semi-sentient mask artifact tied to the Imperium. These were magic items that grew with them, and I said there wouldn't be a lot of other items. Also, as Maskbearers of the Imperium they can requisition any mundane equipment. The Paladin started with plate. They need horses, the local Imperial Post gives them horses. That sort of thing. And finally I use milestone/story-based leveling instead of XP for overcoming creatures.
Why did I tell you all that? Because this has been the absolutely least murderhobo party I have ever seen - including multiple other campaigns playing or running with the same players. Killing things gets rewards - loot and XP. Once those aren't important, the party faced a lot less head on and was a lot more selective about the times they wanted to employ deadly force.
The original post and one of the responses also include Vampire the Masquerade characters.As someone who plays a lot of Super RPGs (mostly my own published game) I am . . . genuinely puzzled by this thread. If it was in one of the D&D forums I wouldn't be puzzled, but this is ttrpg general. . .