FrozenNorth
Hero
The ‘90s was a different time. They believed that killing off a character and replacing him with an identical copy was “raising the stakes”.I thought they basically did, or implied that it could have happened, with Janeway as well.
The ‘90s was a different time. They believed that killing off a character and replacing him with an identical copy was “raising the stakes”.I thought they basically did, or implied that it could have happened, with Janeway as well.
Sounds relevant to D&D.The ‘90s was a different time. They believed that killing off a character and replacing him with an identical copy was “raising the stakes”.
“The past isn’t dead. It isn’t even past.”Sounds relevant to D&D.
Having to have a stack of character sheets with 'the second' printed on them is considered the height of stakes and consequences in some spaces.
Every Fancy Wizard Man is just one bad day from becoming Greasy Wizard Man.
I have definitely played at tables where a character died, and the player very soon introduced "... twin sibling of [PC that died]!"Sounds relevant to D&D.
Having to have a stack of character sheets with 'the second' printed on them is considered the height of stakes and consequences in some spaces.
I had a brand new player die to a crit on the very first attack roll of her very first tutorial combat in 3.5e. We both were a little stunned, so we improvised and had her twin sister rush over right then to avenge her death.I have definitely played at tables where a character died, and the player very soon introduced "... twin sibling of [PC that died]!"
I met Terry Brooks at a book signing a few years ago, and during the Q&A, someone in the audience asked him to pronounce "Shannara" for them, to help settle a bet.
This was actually the main point of contention that caused the rift between the Jithyanki and the Githzerai.We should have learned never to ask the creator for a pronunciation after 'gif'.