In all seriousness, that sounds great. When I'm DM'ing, I have a hard time not giving pseudo-Oscar Wilde-esque witticisms to NPC barbarians... in fact, I often fail.BardStephenFox said:I know he also uses Pride and Prejudice as source material. Of course, I play a Bard.
Agreed. That's the kind of game I run and enjoy playing in. I got my current group to go two whole sessions just roleplaying (I made some fairly amusing NPC's), without having to deploy the requisite 'kick-in-doors-and-start-shooting' combat fodder I have on hand...It is not always easy to maneuver through all the interactions, but it is infiinitely more interesting to me than going in sword-a-swinging. I mean, combat is relatively easy to handle. Trying to avoid getting into combat is harder.
But I think ignoring the way fantasy (RPG's and lit.) are rooted in adolescent (and typically masculine) power-fantasies demonstrates either dishonesty or a lack of basic critical inquiry. Or both...