L to R: Tiefling Cleric, Half-Elf Barbarian.
Yesterday's game
Character Generation With KK
Unlike the rest of my players, KK is one of those people who would, in the natural course of events,
never end up playing D&D. She's just doing it because everybody else is.
I had to start at square -1 with KK. Like--"Elves have pointy ears...ummm...girls like to play elves, dwarves are short people with beards..."
I mentioned that half-orcs have fangs.
KK said she liked fangs and so that sounded pretty good to her.
KK then pointed out that
she had fangs. She showed us how, yes, indeed, she had naturally unusually sharp canines.
This started a long discussion betwixt my players about blowjobs, professional and otherwise, the eminently reasonable theme of which was: it's good to keep unusually sharp canines and blowjobs as separate as is practical.
At the end of which KK then asked--"Ok, so
what am I? A Fangor Beast?"*
"No, you are a half-orc."
I then showed KK a picture of a half-orc.
Then KK changed her mind and decided that she would be a half-elf.
Now, class...
(Does anyone besides me find all this discussion of "race-and-class" with new players always seems pseudo-marxist for a second before you remember what you're talking about? Anyway...)
Well, fighter seemed a good bet, but, knowing KK, I also made a decent pitch for
barbarian. And that, indeed, is what KK chose.**
My Defense of the Barbarian Class by Zak S.
Now a lot of old-schoolers don't like the barbarian. It is, to them, the beginning of the path of nano-specialization that leads eventually to players being like Dragonfondle Darkslickers or whatever, and, more importantly,
away from the original generic Gygaxian labels which said your character was either Trained to Fight and So Was A Fighter or Trained To Use Magic And So Was A Magic-User and the rest is entirely up to your players' imagination--a fighter might be a duellist, a gladiator, an old soldier--that was in your hands, the numbers only told you so much.
While this is fine and good for those of us inclined to investigate and philosophize about such things (DMs, basically) or for people aching to kill some kobolds so much they will do it under any name (12-year-olds, basically), the old names are far from evocative, and when dealing with a full-grown dyslexic adult who has somehow managed to go her whole life without hearing about basically what a gnome is supposed to look like, you
need evocative.
"Warrior" is decent, but implies so much less--"barbarian" on the other hand, this
means something to Kimberly Kane. It means fucking
Metal.
(Dethklok is a close runner-up to Warcaft for Best D&D Gateway Drug of the Early 21st century.)
So my approbation for the barbarian class is based not on the mechanics, or the philosophy, but on the name. It is a good name. It says what needs to be said. Smashing will be done by this character.
"I like smashing stuff," says KK.
Now, I will go on to say that I now appreciate the mechanics of the 3.5 barbarian as well. Here's why:
DMs, how many times has this happened to you?
"Ok, what do y'all want to do?"
"I hit it with my axe."
And your heart sinks
just a little because that player might as well have just said "I hit it with my axe a-fucking-
gain!" or "I hit it with my axe
because what the fuck else am I gonna do?" or "I hit it with my axe and though I'm ok with that for now, next week I'm trying out for the football team and if I get picked then screw you guys..."
Now, the barbarian is perfect for this kind of player because it gives the player an in-game excuse for not knowing what the hell is going on in the plot and not really caring. The barbarian, archetypically, cares for naught but skull-crushing, as does the first-time player who would be well to choose the barbarian.
(Is this player necessarily stupid? No, although, if asked, this player may
self-identify as stupid. KK does, on occasion, but she's really extremely unstupid--for example, she knows more about taking a decent photo than I ever will--and I have a master's in fine arts from Yale. This is merely the kind of player who doesn't like puzzle-solving-as-recreation.)
The person who says I Hit It With My Axe in just this way likes to fight, but is yet uninitiated into the wondrous magical universe of
tactics. (Or even the wondrous magical world of running away and coming back when you've levelled-up.) I have no doubt, in my game, that he or she eventually will be, but there is that crucial in-between period when the person (the person you like and want to play with) is deciding if they like this game at all, where combat walks the line between too-simple-to-be-interesting-and-too-complicated-to-be-comprehensible-especially-since-like-even-dominoes-drives-this-person-nuts.
So, into this void comes the quintessential 3.5 barbarian trait--
Rage. In addition to definitely being
Metal,
Rage gives the axe-wielder something to think about:
Rage can be used only once per day.
To
Rage or not to
Rage?
Now, this isn't the most complicated choice in the world, but it is about the level of complexity the dyslexic, dysnumeric, dominophobic player can handle in an early game, plus it engages a surprising number of subtle judgements:
Is this the boss monster for today? Why or why not do I think that? Have all the underlings I've been killing til now point to this guy?When's the next time I'm going to get to rest?Wait, so my hit points get better
but my armor class gets worse
? What does that mean?In other words, it slowwwwwwly introduces the meat-and-potatoes player to what's going on in the game and to the rich and surprisingly vast pleasures of Fictional Resource-Management. Of which pleasures I surely do not need to expound upon to a bunch of D&D bloggers and DM's.
So, Anyway...Point is, KK, despite appearing to be a 20-something-year-old professional adult-film actress with an apartment in the Hollywood Hills, is actually the I-Hit-It-With-My-Axe Jock that you've all known since you were 14. He was playing because his best friend was, and so is she.
Her character is named Rookia. As in: Rookie+ambiguously fantasy-sounding-suffix. (Though I prefer to think of it as Ruhkya--with an umlaut but I don't know how to type those--as in a vaguely-Icelandic or Finnish warrior-princess name. Tell no-one.)
So this game is all about trying to keep KK entertained despite the fact that she showed up on the day where I had
just decided to do a day where I pushed things a wee bit away from the full-on hack-and-slash.
Every second of not-fighting provoked vicious eyerolls from KK. There was a
map, there was a
prisoner, there was a
puzzle with
cubes,
NPCs with
names (I could feel the eyerolls stab me in the heart as I pronounced them--Maleketh, Ettengeth, Gormengeth), there was
an encounter where fighting was unnecessary, there was a
book with
writing to be
deciphered, and Connie deciding
in the middle of everything that she wanted to know what kind of elf her character half-
was and so we had to look up
all the kinds of
elves, oy, then, thanks to my
oh-so-clever-random-dungeon-generation-method there was what felt like a year of everybody bumping into walls trying to figure out which way to go.
Oh, my heart was fearful. All she wanted was to hang out with her friends and we had unfairly inveigled her into our horrible and involuted game.
But then there was some fighting...
Most of the encounters were cakewalks of the oh-hey-wait-there's-five-PCs-now-and-you're not-all-rogues-anymore-guess-I-shoulda-given-that-guy-more-hit-points variety, but that
seemed to suit KK well enough. I felt KK's threshhold for enjoying-rolling-moderately-high-numbers-and-then-having-the-resulting-imaginary-bloodshed-described-to-her fast approach.
Oh, but then...
The Perfect StormI couldn't have planned it better.
Also: I
didn't plan it better. The dungeon was randomly generated plus I hadn't even realized the PCs could
get where they went from where they were to start with until they were nigh-upon the One-Eyed Thrall Wizard.
Plus, I'd kept forgetting to spring the Damsel-In-Distress-They-Saved-From-A-Tentacle-Monster-That-Was-Following-Them-Around-But-Was-Actually-A-Doppleganger on them and remembered to do it only when the big fight came around.
Plus, by the time the fight came around, an eldritch curse had already melded KK and Mandy into a sort of grotesque siamese twin.
Plus, Mandy's first tactic was to summon a random monster. Which I handled, as usual, by selecting wholly at random from the
entire CR 1/3 thru CR 1 monster list and which resulted in a pseudo dragon.
Plus the dice hated everyone, especially the veteran players.
So, then here's the situation:
All the party members knocked unconscious except Frankie--newbie dark elf rogue with 3 hit points--and KK, on the floor, out of
Rages for the day, siamese-twinned to an unconscious Mandy...
versus
The Thrall Wizard and The Doppleganger, both in perfect health (20+ h.p. each), and a snake that the wizard had created out of a wasted arrow.
Now, those of you who read last week's actual-play report about Frankie's first game will remember that Frankie likes--almost exclusively--to sneak. And to do almost nothing else.
You can see how the proclivities of these two new players might create discord in the party. It's hard for Frankie to go around sneaking into unexplored chambers while KK is itching to murder things.
And they are both so terribly, terribly new to all this. Did I have a TPK on my hands?
Frankie (cowering in the corner, watching her misfired arrow turn into a snake) "What do I do? What do I
do?"
Mandy (metagaming from beyond the vale of consciousness): "Run away!"
KK: (from the floor, hauling Mandy's dead weight, being fanged by a doppleganger) "Blaze of glory, Frankie! Let's do it!"
Breath was baited, and the dice did roll...
It was hideous, grueling and slow:
KK whacked at the doppleganger, landing effective blows,
The pseudo-dragon bit the wizard, who failed his poison save and fell asleep,
Then KK got knocked out,
Frankie got in a good shot on the doppleganger, but it yet lived, biting her for 2 hit points, leaving her with one,
(and alone)
The pseudo-dragon flew to the doppleganger, bit it, failed to poison it, (the whole table hanging on every die roll now) and dematerialized, its 4 rounds of existence ended,
and
then Frankie remembered about the whole cause-
darkness-then-backstab-business.
And that was that for the doppleganger.
Collective sigh of relief.
"Um, what's this white potion Satine has?"
"Well since if you're a dark elf you know that's a Drow healing potion."
And it's all cake once the 4th-level cleric's healed.
So...KK liked that so much she took a photo of the tabletop and twittered it.
We'll see if we can keep it exciting.
__________
*Called it.
**Half-elf barbarian? No sweat. In my campaign White Elves are the pitiless creepy viking-lore kind of elf with blond braids and broken teeth.