Mallus said:I voted 'Yes. Sometimes'. Which is odd, because I attribute a large portion of my beloved homebrew World of CITY to the Paulaner and Maker's Mark that the respective creators drank in a bar whilst creating it.
Oh, you mean not at all?Kestrel said:Go together like chocolate and peanut butter.
It used to be, but then 3e came along and changed it to Zima with a Jolly Rancher in the bottle.Oryan77 said:I thought drinking beer during a game was was the first rule of D&D and mentioned in the first chapter of the DMG.
seans23 said:I'm a home brewer, and I always have four beers on tap at my house. So if we play at my house, the pitchers flow freely. Since it's my beer, my guests are usually gracious enough to have at least one.
We usually have a few beers when we play. The guys who have to drive to the venue only one or two, but others have more. We never get really drunk...Aaron L said:How common is this? I always read about "beer and pretzels" games, and about people having a beer while they play, but isn't something that anyone I've ever played this has eve done, except for a few very unusual times. We just don't do it and never have. The one time I remember actually drinking during a game we got so drunk we just stopped playing before very long because we couldn't keep it together any longer.
So, is drinking during gaming actually really that common? We drink coffee, tea, or pop (or soda, or whatever you barbaric outlanders call it) We'd never even think of having a beer during a game (especially not me as I despise beer *YUCK* it tastes like urine.)
Aaron L said:I've tried to find a beer that didn't taste horrid, lots of them, in fact, because when my friends would get drunk they'd rib me about the Mudslides and other girly drinks I like (that, and the mild wings I like to eat, too... ), and I'd always say it still gets you drunk, but it tastes good too, so who're the dumb ones there?![]()
Philotomy Jurament said:My local pub won't serve Bushmills, as the owner feels it comes from the wrong part of the island.They have Jamesons 1780, though, which is a cut above standard Jamesons. I've had Redbreast once -- an excellent Irish whiskey.
seans23 said:I wonder how your local pub owner would feel if he knew that the same French company owned Bushmills and Jamesons.