D&D General Accents

When I write an NPC, especially a minor one, I put down three things next to the name - a character, a fear, and a love. The fear and love are the driving motivators for the NPC. The character, however, is someone from film, tv, or my life that I will attempt to emulate as I run the NPC. My accents are sooooo bad that they often do not resemble the character I am trying to copy, but it still gives a consistent voice for the PC. To that end, I've attempted almost any accent you can find on the screen.
 

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I can TRY anything.
What I actually get is highly reminiscent of the first part of the "Rain in Spain falls mainly in the plain" scene from My Fair Lady. Half-baked efforts that are just enough like the original to sound like a bad copy.
 

I am Spanish.

Elves - soft and polite French.
Dwarfs and orcs - German or others from North Europe.
Gnomes - Italian
Halflings, kenders and like this (peasants) - Andalucian (South Spain) for comical tone.
 


Matt McConaunghey

Alright alright alright.

The amount of "Alright alright alright" that goes on between me and one of my DMs is probably unhealthy.

Accent-wise, when I DM, I do a lot of different voices, but I generally stick to British accents in D&D, because it feels a bit weird to put in US/Australian/etc. accents. I mean, it probably shouldn't, but it does for me. I tend to try for a voice and use of language rather than a heavy accent with most characters though. I can also do a sort of weird demon-voice thing, for well, er, demons, but the players said it was too creepy and I had to stop.
 

There's accents I can do for a bit but not maintain them, there's others I can do all night badly, and a few I can do all night halfway well.

The 'halfway well' ones:

English
  • aristocratic/pompous in a few different variants
  • west country
  • over-the-top generic
  • toned-down generic in a few different variants
  • toned-down cockney
Scottish
  • highlands
  • lowlands
American
- southern and-or Texas
Canadian (obviously) in a few different variants
French (or at least French-Canadian)
Far Eastern (generic)

The 'all night badly' ones:

Irish (inevitably drifts over to lowlands Scottish and stays there)
Arabic (or generic middle-east)
East Indian (generic)
German
Australian
American if not southern and-or Texas

The ones I can start but not maintain:

Russian or Slavic
Italian
Spanish
Norse or Swedish
 


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