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Favorite Character...


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So far, it'd most definitely have to have been Laskaw, my multicultural NG strongheart halfling bard. Unfortunately, the campaign was rather short-lived.

Crothian said:
My favorite character was Valen, my half ooze gensai oozemaster. :D

If I didn't know any better, I'd mistake you for another guy I know. In my campaign he played an ooze genasi (custom race) wizard going oozemaster who worshipped the drow ooze god Ghuanadaur :)
 

CronoDekar said:
If I didn't know any better, I'd mistake you for another guy I know. In my campaign he played an ooze genasi (custom race) wizard going oozemaster who worshipped the drow ooze god Ghuanadaur :)

I did the Cleric with the Slime (ooze) domain of a god of Diseases and oozes.
 

Hmm...

You know, my current character is rapidly becoming my favorite. Elliam Carrad Bael is a human druid. No PrCs, no templates, no optional rules except some feats and spells. But the character's persona, combined with the events of the campaign, are making for a PC who's a blast to play. He started as a relatively innocent Neutral Good, has shifted toward Neutral due to some fairly dark events in the campaign, and--if the events of the game cooperate--I see him falling completely to Neutral Evil before swinging back toward an ultimately sadder and wiser Neutral Good again.

I haven't enjoyed (or had the opportunity for) this sort of character development in a good long time. :)

I've also really enjoyed Dreimos Auzrek, a minotaur paladin in a Dawnforge campaign; and Ink, a changeling scout in an Eberron campaign.
 
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The Radiant Vigil Rolf Lanley.
Commoner 3/ Fighter 5/Knight of the Watch 3
We started with NPC classes to represent our backgrounds as villagers. Rolf owned a 7.5 acre farm, but turned into a rather known figure throughout Keoland and Geoff. The Knight of the Watch PRC was a homebrew PRC.
 

My human rogue based roughly on Cugel in D&D 3.0 - although he was utterly shafted due to the combat heavy nature of our campaign, I got my revenge on the DM by using my non-combat skills to annoy the hell out of him whenever the opportunity presented itself. I know that sounds bad, so let me explain...

The campaign was dishonestly advertised by the DM as being roleplay intensive, rather than combat intensive, so many players created characters created non-combat oriented characters with an eye towards social interaction (such as my rogue).

From session one onward, it became pretty clear that the DM had a pre-conceived, combat intensive, storyline that we were supposed to follow as, whenver we deviated from his plan, he picked up our characters and placed them back on the tracks.

At least four of the six players (including the Dm's wife) expressed open disdain for the bait and switch as well as the railroading, but the DM kept right on doing it despite promises of easing up on the deus ex BS. So... the players decided to play the game that they were promised whether the DM liked it or not ;)
 
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My favorite character is Endur, my Paladin/Fighter/Dwarven Defender in the Living Greyhawk campaign.

(Or possibly my favorite character was my girlfriend's character, a Dwarven Priestess of Beory with the Animal and Plant domains, who was married to Endur in the Living Greyhawk campaign)

Endur and Diesa had a ton of amazing adventures in Living Greyhawk/Living Geoff.

Highlights include when they got married and when they went on their honeymoon to Keoland.
 
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Lysanthia the Good Cleric. Had her face stolen. After a long trek in the underdark she decided that she simply couldn't adventure with the rest of the party anymore. (These were the guys who drew faces on her blank featues while she was 'asleep' in order to 'help' her.) But she was with the party for the shift from 3.0 to 3.5.
 

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