Numion said:Do you think it would ever be right for a noble to defend his honor / his mistress honor in a duel in case someone of lower background gives him lip? It was expected in the ye medieval times, but your D&D might be modelled after something else.
How would you have a noble resolve a situation of someone giving him lip and being generally disrespectful? I would think that physical punishment was the way of the land back then.
That's one reasonable outcome. As a PC who had just saved the lords keep, I would be expecting, nay, demanding, a hefty compensation for the heroic deed / unthankful response combo.
Now this is something I might do myself. While I believe the PCs actions were justified, it's always a nice idea to use recurring characters, and this might be a logical thing for the guard to do - after all, the 'secret' of gaining personal power shouldn't be really a secret in D&D-land (kill, loot, rinse, repeat). But it's quite clear who the villain in this scenario would be ..
The guard sounds a bit messed up. He'd abandon his post and refuse to serve the good guys after a bit of a scuffle, but then would serve the vampires. Again, a good idea (something I might do), but this is again casting the guard as a villain (which he might well be, I mean, they've gotta pop up somehow).
I thought the duel wasn't to the death. If it had been, the guard would, well, be dead.
Except exhibiting much greater martial prowess than the guards and actually fighting the vampires. Or does slapping some sense into a backtalking, friendly-fire-shooting guard make the PCs worse than the vampires?
Probably the bad showing the guards gave made this a foregone conclusion.
In my game a duel of honor can only be fought among people of the same rank. What would have happened in my world is that the captain of the Guard would have the right to postpone the duel until he got get a champion to fight on his behalf or they would have waited until the lords of the keep came back and let them say what is to be.
It depends on the noble. Some of mine would have cut the poor guy's tongue out, some would have told him to shut up others might have relieved him of duty. It would really depend on the situation and who had clear command. If the Lords of the keep put the PC Lord in command then I think the PC Lord had a right to expect the guard to follow his orders. Though I still think he could have tried to smooth the waters over the friendly fire. And he would have the right to discipline the guard if he disobeys.
Now if the Captain was left in charge then this PC Lord overstepped the bounds of hospitality.
As a DM I might make this fellow have an ego problem or he had an abusive lord and he had enough so he goes down the path of evil to fix what he sees as wrongs. And no in no way do I think that slapping an NPC is in the same league as vampires.
I don't like players who play their PCs as bullies or antagonistic towards lower level NPCs and expect that there will not be any repercussions just because they are PCs. So that maybe coloring this for me.