Yeah, I walked out of my last D&D group after the rest of the party (including the paladin, played by the DM’s buddy) decided to let the antagonists genocide my character’s species.
Ooooh, so the antagonists genocided your group. I was subscribed to that other page where you posted something similar and that one sounded like your team mates were doing the genociding. http://thisis.delvecomic.com/NewWP/comic/ooc/
Be honest, under how many strips did you post that yesterday? 😀
So, I take it the group had the power to stop the antagonists without too much risk, but decided against it anyway even though there was no valid reason? How old are these people?
It was a campus game (technically Pathfinder, but same basic stuff) — everyone was a uni student, aka old enough to know better. And I just posted it under these two.
The antagonists were basically a bunch of Knight Templar types — I think in-story, they were actually a previous generation of heroes. They’d decided that something needed to be done about the more-or-less continuous war between the Drow and the surface world, and that that something should be genocide by way of a DM-fiat-powered “kill everyone” machine. I was playing a Drow noble with a stubborn idealistic streak, a (tenuous) claim to the throne, and about a third of a plan to take over the Drow and institute lasting peace. We followed them down into the Underdark – I was under the assumption that we were going to stop the bad guys from committing genocide, because duh. I’m still not sure if they’d all decided in advance to be douchecanoes, or if it was just a spur-of-the-moment sort of thing, but once we caught up, they not only didn’t stop the genocidal supervillains, they actively prevented me from interfering. Then, when I called them out on it out-of-game, they didn’t get why I was angry with them.
Okay, that was pure assholery. It’d be a lot more interesting to delve into politics instead of just slaughtering everything the DM created for the campaign.
I think Bree/Jen is about to start a Mysidian Legend.
One born of a dragon,
bearing darkness and
light, shall rise to
the heavens over the
still land.
Bathing the moon in
eternal light, she brings
a promise to Mother Earth
with bounty and grace.
But someday the moon
shall depart, seeking
its own light. The sons
of moon and Earth shall
then part, divided by
the flow of time.
That’s the most awesome “fuck you, Brian, get lost!” ever.
It was at that moment, Brian realized…
He has no chance with Jen.
:’)
Heh heh 8)
I can think of a few times I’ve wanted to do that to a DM.
Yeah, I walked out of my last D&D group after the rest of the party (including the paladin, played by the DM’s buddy) decided to let the antagonists genocide my character’s species.
Ooooh, so the antagonists genocided your group. I was subscribed to that other page where you posted something similar and that one sounded like your team mates were doing the genociding.
http://thisis.delvecomic.com/NewWP/comic/ooc/
Be honest, under how many strips did you post that yesterday? 😀
So, I take it the group had the power to stop the antagonists without too much risk, but decided against it anyway even though there was no valid reason? How old are these people?
It was a campus game (technically Pathfinder, but same basic stuff) — everyone was a uni student, aka old enough to know better. And I just posted it under these two.
The antagonists were basically a bunch of Knight Templar types — I think in-story, they were actually a previous generation of heroes. They’d decided that something needed to be done about the more-or-less continuous war between the Drow and the surface world, and that that something should be genocide by way of a DM-fiat-powered “kill everyone” machine. I was playing a Drow noble with a stubborn idealistic streak, a (tenuous) claim to the throne, and about a third of a plan to take over the Drow and institute lasting peace. We followed them down into the Underdark – I was under the assumption that we were going to stop the bad guys from committing genocide, because duh. I’m still not sure if they’d all decided in advance to be douchecanoes, or if it was just a spur-of-the-moment sort of thing, but once we caught up, they not only didn’t stop the genocidal supervillains, they actively prevented me from interfering. Then, when I called them out on it out-of-game, they didn’t get why I was angry with them.
I haven’t played D&D since.
Okay, that was pure assholery. It’d be a lot more interesting to delve into politics instead of just slaughtering everything the DM created for the campaign.
Love the blue and pink of the new sword.
Thanks!
I reject your reality and substitute my own!
8)
>The lights of Blade!Lassa and Blade!Moonblade are melting into each other
I think Bree/Jen is about to start a Mysidian Legend.
One born of a dragon,
bearing darkness and
light, shall rise to
the heavens over the
still land.
Bathing the moon in
eternal light, she brings
a promise to Mother Earth
with bounty and grace.
But someday the moon
shall depart, seeking
its own light. The sons
of moon and Earth shall
then part, divided by
the flow of time.
Nice Final Fantasy 4 (or 2 depending on the version you played) reference if I’m not mistaken…
FFII – USA (1991)
Wait, no. I’m mistaken. It was Final Fantasy Chronicles.
Wait, who is ‘Grace’?
And why was Rita using this machine? o_O
If you keep this up, there might be more clothes in these few episodes than in the rest of the comic combined…. 😉
ummm, i might completely forget who brian is……
He’s the GM who pissed Jen off by getting Sephni eaten by the Devourer.
I trust we’ve not overlooked that Teal is quite likely to have set this sequence of events in motion.
I think Brian is more the lv 99 lich then this guy.
Riddle of the dracomage: What happens if the votes are split down the middle?
Wardrobe malfunction? xD
Heh heh, I guess we may find out.
“How?” “Well, you rolled a 1.”