Fashion in D&D

Pick One or More

  • Artisan’s outfit

    Votes: 36 16.8%
  • Cleric’s vestments

    Votes: 69 32.2%
  • Cold weather outfit

    Votes: 96 44.9%
  • Courtier’s outfit

    Votes: 66 30.8%
  • Entertainer’s outfit

    Votes: 52 24.3%
  • Explorer’s outfit

    Votes: 159 74.3%
  • Monk’s outfit

    Votes: 46 21.5%
  • Noble’s outfit

    Votes: 71 33.2%
  • Peasant’s outfit

    Votes: 43 20.1%
  • Royal outfit

    Votes: 24 11.2%
  • Scholar’s outfit

    Votes: 55 25.7%
  • Traveler’s outfit

    Votes: 131 61.2%
  • None of the above

    Votes: 14 6.5%

Mark CMG

Creative Mountain Games
How many of the "outfits" (or vestments) in core D&D have you purchased for characters in-game?

Artisan’s outfit
Cleric’s vestments
Cold weather outfit
Courtier’s outfit
Entertainer’s outfit
Explorer’s outfit
Monk’s outfit
Noble’s outfit
Peasant’s outfit
Royal outfit
Scholar’s outfit
Traveler’s outfit

Do these cover every option one should have?
 

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Heh. Worrying about clothes is boring, so we typically just blow it over. I did have a changeling character who had a good half a dozen outfits, though, and we did have to buy some really fancy dress threads for a fancy party we went to once recently.

Otherwise, though, our characters could be running around in nothing but our armor and our skivvies for all we know. We don't pay any attention to it.
 

I've picked only traveller's outfits for the many characters I've played.

I still tend to think of charachter clothes in terms of individual pieces of clothing, robes, hooded cloak, high hard boots, belt, etc.
 


Cold Weather outfit, traveler's outfit, courtier's outfit (because you can't go before the Duke in your dirty traveling cloths!), scholar's outfit (because sometimes its better for the curator or librarian to think you are just a scholar and not an adventurer researching the weakness of the undead when the local lord is a vampire!).
 

All of the above.

The prices are also used as a baseline for buying "fancier" stuff - with increasing ad hoc prices determined by the DM.
 

Most of my characters have ended up buying a 'noble's outfit' or the equivalent - pretty much upper-middle class or lower-upper class kit - by 5th level, if they didn't have one already. If I have my outfits straight, the 'explorerer's outfit' is the other constant.
 

Mark CMG said:
How many of the "outfits" (or vestments) in core D&D have you purchased for characters in-game?

Do these cover every option one should have?


No, they definitely don't cover everything I use in our game. But then again thats why Dark Quest Games has a product called Cloth of Gold to be available in the near future.
 

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