Do you use "voice acting" when you play?

I think "voice acting" would oversell it, but, similar to others here, I try to be clear about when I'm speaking IC and when it's OOC, and I also try to adjust tone and vocabulary a bit based on the character I'm playing / the NPC I'm currently representing. It's only a handful of really distinct voices, but it also helps me a bit to get into my character and into the game world.
 

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And 99% of the time it annoys me when other people do.
Why? I know that a couple other posters commented this as well and I never asked but for some reason I'm gonna ask you...and anyone else that reads this...

Why does it annoy you, or why don't you like it?

I mean, I can see someone not wanting to do it themselves, or not feeling comfortable, or even being unable somehow...but the idea that someone else doing it being annoying makes me wonder...

EDIT: Additional question!

Without the "funny voice" or prefacing everything the PC says with "PC says" how do you keep OOC speech and IC speech distinct without regular moments of confusion about which is which?

I'm curious about this cause I have watched a few more AP videos I really really do find the groups that don't regularly use "funny voice" can be really hard to follow at times cause I routinely find myself unable to discern between OOC narration and things PCs say IC.
 
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Nope. For me, role-playing is not about amateur dramatics. Unwelcome take I expect.

Only in how it implies that other things at the table aren't "amateur".

Gamers are, broadly, amateur dramatics, amateur historians, amateur tacticians, amateur storytellers... all of it is amateur. So being down on one aspect of it for being amateur is... a bit weird.
 



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