What was the best character you played...

So many characters... lessee.

In a one-shot adventure I play my first and only Monk, a half-orc with good wisdom but a really poor intelligence. He was a lot of fun and a scary grappler.

my half-elven paladin Jorindell is currently level 11 and an absolute blast to play. Being a half-elf in this particular campaign world is a bad thing, so couple that with his paladinhood and he's really fighting an uphill battle. He's also aged quite a few years and is a march harsher figure than his younger, idealistc self. I really enjoy roleplaying him and his struggles, and when he fights evil nasties in combat he is an absolute terror.

My Ranger 1/Rogue 1 has the potential to become one of my coolest characters of all time. He's a fanatical follower of St. Cuthbert, and is currently stalking and hunting prestigious members of a particular crime syndicate that ruined and eventually murdered his merchant father.
 

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I mainly DM, but a few of my faves are...

D20 Mod
Lester Rosenberg, aka Lester Bang, aka The Brimstone Baritone Anti-Cyclone Rolling Stone Preacher from the East. Lester is an 18 year old recent high school graduate who works as a freelance music journalist while attending college. He's also a Columbine survivor and minor celebrity for writing a widely reprinted article "I Survived Columbine and All I Got Was This Lousy Salon Article". He carries a loaded 9mm. eveywhere he goes. And he's a cleric --well, Acolyte-- of the Great God Bruce Springsteen...

D&D
Grenache Shiraz, priest of Mouqul, who now now styles himself Sir Shiraz, Knight of Value Added. Shiraz is a free-trade obsessed ex-monk now cleric of Mouqul, the Mighty Master of All Matters Merchantile. He speaks in a voice thats an unholy fusion of old Italian mobster, old chain-smoking Jewish woman from LI, Harvey Firestein, and Lt. Columbo. And dresses in a worn terrycloth robe with cheap glod embroidery hidden by a Hat of Disguise. He believes that money is the root of all goodness, and that burying wealth with the dead is the greatest sin. He often alludes to the Great Wheel of Wealth, spends it as soon as he gets it, and so far, has not directly taken a life.
 

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