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General Tabletop Discussion
*Dungeons & Dragons
What makes for good antagonists?
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<blockquote data-quote="Bayushi_seikuro" data-source="post: 9540377" data-attributes="member: 7024851"><p>A friend had run a Rolemaster campaign with factions - Law, Chaos, Good, and Evil. Each end of the axis had a champion, and what was making the universe start to fall apart was Evil had two people fighting to be its champion, Law had become utter stasis, and other existential messes.</p><p></p><p>He made agents of Chaos that were the party's equals and opposites - each NPC was designed to counter a specific PC. What is hilarious is that, through no conscious effort on our part, we'd end up facing off with an NPC designed for another PC, therefore we'd have an upper hand.</p><p></p><p>By the end of the campaign, we'd semi-allied with the Lord of Chaos because he was somehow the most stable and trustworthy faction heads.</p><p></p><p>Side note: the entity trying to usurp the power of Evil was the son of a former (PC) paladin who fell to Chaos, impregnated a succubus, and was hit with the Be Not spell, that removed him from ever existing in the universe. Yet his son was protected because of the power of his mother.</p><p></p><p>It was a wild campaign.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Bayushi_seikuro, post: 9540377, member: 7024851"] A friend had run a Rolemaster campaign with factions - Law, Chaos, Good, and Evil. Each end of the axis had a champion, and what was making the universe start to fall apart was Evil had two people fighting to be its champion, Law had become utter stasis, and other existential messes. He made agents of Chaos that were the party's equals and opposites - each NPC was designed to counter a specific PC. What is hilarious is that, through no conscious effort on our part, we'd end up facing off with an NPC designed for another PC, therefore we'd have an upper hand. By the end of the campaign, we'd semi-allied with the Lord of Chaos because he was somehow the most stable and trustworthy faction heads. Side note: the entity trying to usurp the power of Evil was the son of a former (PC) paladin who fell to Chaos, impregnated a succubus, and was hit with the Be Not spell, that removed him from ever existing in the universe. Yet his son was protected because of the power of his mother. It was a wild campaign. [/QUOTE]
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What makes for good antagonists?
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