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Wandering Adventure Party

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  3. "Level Is More Than Just a Number." (Art by Sebastian Leverette)

"Level Is More Than Just a Number." (Art by Sebastian Leverette)

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  • E ensignwashout@startrek.website

    Yes. That’s one reason that the Fate system basically disallows characters ever being low level. Low level starts aren’t actually particularly fun, and they can prevent characters from having diverse epic shared backstory.

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    xm34@feddit.org
    wrote last edited by
    #23

    Counterpoint: I love rugged nobody adventurer types. I love the point in the campaign when you still have to use your brain to solve problems and when wild animals still pose a significant threat. This may be one of the reasons I stopped playing DnD altogether.

    It’s not fun at low levels because your characters have absolutely no skills whatsoever and it sucks at high levels because over time you only get a bunch of instant-problem-solvers like Tiny Hut, Fly and Teleport.

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    • E empathicvagrant@lemmy.world

      The only time I ever loved an OP backstory for a lv1 was a friend who was a great mage of death and destruction who destroyed anything deemed beautiful out of hatred.

      A witch turned him into a diamond, and his necromancy (somehow) allowed him to possess whomever held the diamond.

      He was a goblin for 3 levels and then a wolf ate him and the diamond so we had a pet dog for awhile basically.

      KichaeK Offline
      KichaeK Offline
      Kichae
      Forum Master
      wrote last edited by Kichae
      #24

      empathicvagrant@lemmy.world Backstory is probably the wrong concept for a low-level character. They, instead, have a background. Backstories are prequel fodder, while backgrounds are used to figure out character motivation, and how a character reacts to future events.

      Generally speaking, you don’t want to fill in blanks you don’t need filled i, because it’s creatively limiting your future self. If the events that got you to Session 1 are too interesting, you’ve probably written too much.

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      • X xm34@feddit.org

        Counterpoint: I love rugged nobody adventurer types. I love the point in the campaign when you still have to use your brain to solve problems and when wild animals still pose a significant threat. This may be one of the reasons I stopped playing DnD altogether.

        It’s not fun at low levels because your characters have absolutely no skills whatsoever and it sucks at high levels because over time you only get a bunch of instant-problem-solvers like Tiny Hut, Fly and Teleport.

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        ensignwashout@startrek.website
        wrote last edited by ensignwashout@startrek.website
        #25

        Good points. I feel like Fate does a better job staying in the interesting in-between for longer, and also supports “epic” stories a bit better (than other systems I have played).

        But I haven’t tried to force Fate to support the newbie to epic growth, because the rulebook calls out that the Fate rules intentionally ignore supporting the ability to play as a helpless nobody.

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        • KichaeK Kichae

          ensignwashout@startrek.website I don’t know, zero-to-hero is one of the best story tropes out there. Totally nullifying it seems kind of wild to me. But you have to know who you’re playing, and if you’re playing a highly skilled veteran with a rich history of great deeds, you need to understand that that is not a Level 1 character.

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          ensignwashout@startrek.website
          wrote last edited by
          #26

          Yes. It zero-to-hero is a classic. It was interesting to me the authors explicitly call it out as not a preferred use of Fate.

          I don’t know if Fate adds support for it in some supplement. Now I will be watching for it.

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          • J jjjalljs@ttrpg.network

            Yep. Feel like we just had some posts about this. People who write that kind of backstory should just write a book. It’s especially bad in games like D&D where you’re starting out as a level 1 nobody. Some games, even some games of D&D, start at higher power levels, so the story is at least mechanically plausible.

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            chatokun@lemmy.dbzer0.com
            wrote last edited by
            #27

            I believe Brian Murphy said you can write that backstory for a D&D character and make it work if it’s a comedy and all of that greatness is just in your character’s head. I don’t get to play much but tried to take a similar mindset: my character isn’t as badass as they think they are.

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            • C chatokun@lemmy.dbzer0.com

              I believe Brian Murphy said you can write that backstory for a D&D character and make it work if it’s a comedy and all of that greatness is just in your character’s head. I don’t get to play much but tried to take a similar mindset: my character isn’t as badass as they think they are.

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              jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
              wrote last edited by
              #28

              I think the “they think they’re a hero but they’re just level 1” trope goes in the same bucket as “let’s make characters based on ourselves!”. Everyone comes up with it but it’s rarely as good as imagined.

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              • A ayutsukasa@lemmy.zip

                Or just start the campaign at a higher level.

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                archpawn@lemmy.world
                wrote last edited by
                #29

                But then you’re still missing out on killing the dragon.

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                • S Sai Somsphet

                  And this is why my next character is gonna be Steve the fisherman. Been spear fishing his whole life. That’s it. That’s his backstory. He carries a spear.

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                  archpawn@lemmy.world
                  wrote last edited by
                  #30

                  But with all that XP from all the fish he killed, shouldn’t he be a high level by now?

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                  • J jjjalljs@ttrpg.network

                    Yep. Feel like we just had some posts about this. People who write that kind of backstory should just write a book. It’s especially bad in games like D&D where you’re starting out as a level 1 nobody. Some games, even some games of D&D, start at higher power levels, so the story is at least mechanically plausible.

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                    thegreatdarkness@ttrpg.network
                    wrote last edited by
                    #31

                    I personally get pissed when I ask for advice how much backstory is ok for game starting at level 3 or 5 and people still tell me to be dumb nobody who doesn’t know how to hold a sword, even though that makes no fucking sense.

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                    • C chatokun@lemmy.dbzer0.com

                      I believe Brian Murphy said you can write that backstory for a D&D character and make it work if it’s a comedy and all of that greatness is just in your character’s head. I don’t get to play much but tried to take a similar mindset: my character isn’t as badass as they think they are.

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                      d20bard@ttrpg.network
                      wrote last edited by
                      #32

                      I joined a running campaign (still at the low levels) set in a magic library and I had a character with a comically egregious case of that kind of back story. The campaign had a tight foundation with everyone else already knowing each other and being there for a reason.

                      It wasn’t easy to recon me in, so we didn’t and I worked this out with the DM. I just had all these things I’d reference. Grand, level-inapproriate adventures, offering impossible feats as part of insane plans, being a key figure in historical events that the others were quite sure had never happened, etc. But absolutely no other sign of insanity or chronic lying in my serious, good-aligned, heroic character.

                      The DM let everyone have fun scratching their heads over it for a few sessions before they stumbled on my character’s series and found out he was just a fictional hero spawned by the library to assist their quest. His level was from the creation magic and had nothing to do with his real-only-to-him backstory.

                      It worked out in that very very specific setting.

                      KichaeK 1 Reply Last reply
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                      • D d20bard@ttrpg.network

                        I joined a running campaign (still at the low levels) set in a magic library and I had a character with a comically egregious case of that kind of back story. The campaign had a tight foundation with everyone else already knowing each other and being there for a reason.

                        It wasn’t easy to recon me in, so we didn’t and I worked this out with the DM. I just had all these things I’d reference. Grand, level-inapproriate adventures, offering impossible feats as part of insane plans, being a key figure in historical events that the others were quite sure had never happened, etc. But absolutely no other sign of insanity or chronic lying in my serious, good-aligned, heroic character.

                        The DM let everyone have fun scratching their heads over it for a few sessions before they stumbled on my character’s series and found out he was just a fictional hero spawned by the library to assist their quest. His level was from the creation magic and had nothing to do with his real-only-to-him backstory.

                        It worked out in that very very specific setting.

                        KichaeK Offline
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                        Kichae
                        Forum Master
                        wrote last edited by
                        #33

                        Ok, that’s brilliant and awesome. Brisome.

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