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<blockquote data-quote="Naszir" data-source="post: 5125574" data-attributes="member: 55043"><p>I'd say about 40% in character and 40% ooc and 20% out of game. This is all done with Fantasy Grounds 2. I think a majority of roleplayers are pretty bad actors (I include myself in this generalization, I can't do an accent to save my life) and add the additional complexity of trying to improv off all the other people in the group. Most roleplayers end up nervously trying to pull off characteristics but we all laugh and just have fun anyway. Look at Chris Perkins and the guys from Robot Chicken. A lot of gaming sessions devolve from an acting perspective into a goof fest (quotes from Monty Python, LoTR, Zombieland and any other thing that your quirky group manages to find funny).</p><p></p><p>In between sessions is when most of my guys tend to get into character as we send emails back and forth setting up for the next session or recapping the last. The guys I play with get into expressing their characters through writting more than through acting during the game.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Naszir, post: 5125574, member: 55043"] I'd say about 40% in character and 40% ooc and 20% out of game. This is all done with Fantasy Grounds 2. I think a majority of roleplayers are pretty bad actors (I include myself in this generalization, I can't do an accent to save my life) and add the additional complexity of trying to improv off all the other people in the group. Most roleplayers end up nervously trying to pull off characteristics but we all laugh and just have fun anyway. Look at Chris Perkins and the guys from Robot Chicken. A lot of gaming sessions devolve from an acting perspective into a goof fest (quotes from Monty Python, LoTR, Zombieland and any other thing that your quirky group manages to find funny). In between sessions is when most of my guys tend to get into character as we send emails back and forth setting up for the next session or recapping the last. The guys I play with get into expressing their characters through writting more than through acting during the game. [/QUOTE]
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