I had a guy try to justify the latter type of account as "I'm just not very active on reddit". My man, you made one post, commented on one other post a few weeks later, then complete radio silence for 9 years, just to pop up spreading anti-trans propaganda on post after post?
I'm running a bit where my party is trying to kill a god, its not quite absconding with their soul, but kind of the same?
Anyway, I told them they have to preform a ritual to un-diefy her body, she's not inhabiting it right now and they actually already stole it. To complete the ritual I told them they had to collect 3 divine conduits, you're looking to contain a soul, so maybe divine vessels or batteries or something. But I let them chose, either 3 that represent her connection to the domains she has power in or three that oppose them. The three that align with the god would send them searching through the lore of the God to learn what artifacts would represent her connection to those domains, the 3 that oppose them send them searching into the lore of her enemies.
Either way, you're preparing 3 "dungeons" and getting to go into some fun world building and lore without just casting exposition.
Easily my favorite and longest played character was a goliath' but a terribly nontraditional one.
With the whole "survival of the fittest" mentality that they have I made one of those left behind. He had fallen down the side of a mountain while training with his clan, and was left behind. He fell all the way down it though, skittering to a stop as he crashed through the roof of a barn in the halfling settlement at the base of the mountain. The halflings didn't abandon him like his people did they cared for him and took care of him while he healed. He stayed with them embracing their much more casual lifestyle, until a mudslide washed through the town. He was the only one tall and strong enough to help save the halflings that were stranded and threatened by it. He came to the conclusion that not being the fittest among the goliaths didn't mean he wasn't worthy of still being a hero.
I played him as a mix of Don Quixote and The Tick. The halflings had read him all kind of hero stories about knights and honor while he was recovering from his fall. So he had adopted that code of conduct and chivalry, kept a journal detailing his heroic deeds, and never shrank away from a good cause, even if it was foolishly dangerous.
But they aren't giving you the pdf with it either. They're giving you access to a digitized book that they can cut off access to whenever they want to push the next edition. It's just another example of Hasbro missing the entire point of the community's complaint.
@Redsven
@lemmy.world