blackshirt5
First Post
For a Dm to tell a player, "no, you can't do that with your character" or "Your character wouldn't do that!" in regards to your character's personality?
We're getting ready for Angcuru's FR campaign. After Angcuru tells me about how the way things are for the Avariel(which is the race my character comes from) being hunted by the drow as wel as the blue dragons, I decide that he's gonna try to hide his identity...and not very well at that.
He introduces himself to everyone as something different. "Hi, I'm Ted. Ted Nugent." "Axelrod, Axelrod Rimthruster, glad to meet you." "Helena, Helena Handbasket." Angcuru looks at me and says "no, you can't do that."
What's your opinion, is it fair for a DM to do this? I'm gonna play the character as a dead-serious ranger the rest of the time; I just want to lighten up the mood a bit sometimes, and it does seem like it'd be appropriate to the character.
We're getting ready for Angcuru's FR campaign. After Angcuru tells me about how the way things are for the Avariel(which is the race my character comes from) being hunted by the drow as wel as the blue dragons, I decide that he's gonna try to hide his identity...and not very well at that.
He introduces himself to everyone as something different. "Hi, I'm Ted. Ted Nugent." "Axelrod, Axelrod Rimthruster, glad to meet you." "Helena, Helena Handbasket." Angcuru looks at me and says "no, you can't do that."
What's your opinion, is it fair for a DM to do this? I'm gonna play the character as a dead-serious ranger the rest of the time; I just want to lighten up the mood a bit sometimes, and it does seem like it'd be appropriate to the character.