Lanefan
Victoria Rules
The game doesn't have to stop while a player rolls up a new character, other than a few brief interruptions where the DM has to answer questions (and those opportunities will happen anyway).Dandy. Your experiences are very different than those of many people, myself included. People did and still do cook up characters in advance and in isolation for various reasons, not least of which being testing the chargen system out or making a pool of NPCs. There were also plenty of groups (especially in the 70s and early 80s) where showing up to a game as a new player without a ready character was very bad form because it was seen as wasting everyone's time. Same went for replacing fatalities if you lost a PC and the GM allowed you to start a new one mid-session - they weren't going to stop the game for you to make one, so having backups was pretty common in some circles.
Show up to my game with a pre-rolled character and my response will be something like "That's nice. Here's the dice. Start over."And yes, you did see people show with absurdly implausible characters that they'd rolled up at home, "honest" - and sometimes they had, although they'd never mention it took them dozens or even hundreds of tries to do so. I knew one guy who was notorious for having 300 page spiral notebooks filled with potential PCs, one to a page, all made at home and as they died he'd rip out a page and go on to the next ASAP. Most people wouldn't play with him.
The GM in that case can always pass a note to the rolling-up player asking for the relevant info to be passed along as soon as it's generated. If the campaign's just starting, a GM like that would (I would think) have roll-up night one week but not actually drop the puck until the next session, during which time she could come up with those hooks etc.Because even today some groups see it as wasting valuable play time. Other times GMs will want finished character sheets before they even meet the first time because they plan to include character-specific hooks in teh game from before word one.
Sure, and no problem with that!Lots of folks do their chargen via email exchanges along with other session zero stuff even when they plan to play in person. Making characters at home is not the same as making them in isolation with modern tech, which is a big part of the argument for collaborating with your whole table when character building - and world building, for that matter.
Also some folks just get their jollies making characters whether they have an immediate use for them or not.
But you're still rolling up from scratch at the table.
That "character build" aspect is something I really wish would Go Away, but it seems that ship has already sailed.Maybe they wind up as NPCs, maybe they find a PC role someday, maybe they just collect dust, for some folks the process is reward unto itself. And that's not some Ye Olden Days thing that died with the Reagan presidency, people do it even today, as proven by the countless "character build" discussions online - with many builds projected to absurd levels of advancement the character will probably never reach in play.