![]() Moreover, it gave me a safe environment to explore an uncomfortable topic: race relations. My wife kept thorough notes and drew this from my description. I found the experience to be an exciting and welcome change from my ho hum quiet monk. Having killed nine goblins earlier on in the same adventure, the other players lacked much trust in goblins and kept Glink bound up and weaponless for quite some time. Not only was he a goblin, but he was a thieving rogue goblin. I still introduced my new player character, a goblin named Glink. The moment the players realized that it was a dream, they groaned, so… damage done. I had my reasons I wanted to throw in a lot of puzzles and other weird stuff into a world our regular DM was running without messing anything up. ![]() I did a double no-no on that adventure – introducing the goblin while setting them up in a dream adventure. In fact, the first time I introduced a goblin to the party, I had taken a turn at being the DM. If you’ve played D&D for any length of time, you can probably imagine that few groups appreciate the dude that keeps showing up with goblins when the rest of the party are elves, humans, and dwarves. I’ve been playing Dungeons & Dragons for 20+ years, and in that time I’ve managed to create and play three goblins out of my last five characters. Do you have a favorite race in your fantasy RPG? Read on to hear about Marcus' favorite race to play and find out why.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |