Please be careful with spoilers from major campaigns, particularly Curse of Strand cos I’m playing through that atm please thank you 😊
I’ll go first…
I’m running a homebrew pirate campaign and I have a character called Rusty Ben who’s great fun to play. He’s a warforged in the form of a skeleton made of rusted iron. He wears a pirate hat and he has a stuffed parrot nailed to his shoulder. He’s a great sailor, who never tires, or eats, and he even keeps watch as he ‘sleeps’, because warforged. He’s also handy with repair work, so he’s a valuable member of the party’s pirate crew. He’s very friendly and speaks in a kind of silly Southern US accent. When he asked to join the party’s crew, he held put a gold piece and said “I can pay my own way!”. They declined and one of them gave him a silver piece as wages. He was bowled over by their generosity. Another player offered him a copper piece as well, and he got all serious and said, “No, no… let me earn the copper piece.”
He acts as a kind of sailoring guide for the party. He has worked aboard quite a few pirate ships, until he was aboard one that sank in battle. He walked for a long time across the bottom of the sea and eventually found an island and just walked up onto the beach, where he met the crew of The Candlestick Maker’s Revenge and joined them, which is where the party met him at the start of the campaign. They took passage on that ship to get to the island chain that is the setting fornthe canpaign. He’s one of my favourite people that I’ve ever made up!
He didn’t last long, because my party murdered him, but I had a cleric of the goddess of luck that would challenge people in the tavern to dice games (which he couldn’t lose), to raise funds for his temple. My barbarian spent like an hour trying to beat him before he realized what was going on
@Infynis @jossbo Another Luck Cleric! Mine was basically Friar Tuck. He was always drunk (a lucky drunk) and searched every couch for loose change that he would give to the needy. I built him with a level dip into Barbarian so he could wear robes and occasionally “lose his temper”. I would love to get to play him again someday.
That’s hilarious. Did the player fall for it, or were they just RPing the barbarian really well?
It took him a bit to catch on, but definitely not as long as it took his character