Question of the Day: If you could play D&D with anybody, dead or alive, who would be in your party?
The exact same group that I already have. :)
Except, since you said I have the choice, I'd prefer them dead.
I’d be inclined to agree, but I think I’d definitely want to play a game with the cast of Critical Role (and maybe Joe Manganiello) or with Professor DM of the channel Dungeon Craft. Then of course there’s the fellow up North running a 40 year long game. That would be fun to play in. And, how has no one said Gary Gygax yet?
Professor DM would be great to play with. Robert Wardhaugh's playstyle seems a little too tough for my tastes. I like the idea that if your character dies, you're permanently out of the campaign, but it sounds kinda harsh.
Gygax doesn't have the best reputation here, which is probably why he hasn't been mentioned.
Wardhaugh allows you to have multiple characters though. You can have a character die and still have plenty more available. Once they’re all dead you’re out though, which would feel so terrible. And even if Gygax has lost some of his reputation he is why we are here today. Someone would have made a game like this eventually, but who knows what we would be playing right now.
I was just watching the Britbox show Beyond Paradise and noticed a few D&D books in the opening scene of episode two.
In what movie and TV shows have you seen D&D referenced? Not counting the D&D movies.
The most recent reference (though it was more of an entire scene) that comes to mind is Cobra Kai (no spoilers). There's a scene where a character is running a D&D game, his BBEG appears, and declares that the PCs take "8d12 of psychic damage". Not the best representation of D&D, but the scene makes a point that he's a bad DM I guess.
Question of the Day: If you could play D&D with anybody, dead or alive, who would be in your party?
The exact same group that I already have. :)
Except, since you said I have the choice, I'd prefer them dead.
I’d be inclined to agree, but I think I’d definitely want to play a game with the cast of Critical Role (and maybe Joe Manganiello) or with Professor DM of the channel Dungeon Craft. Then of course there’s the fellow up North running a 40 year long game. That would be fun to play in. And, how has no one said Gary Gygax yet?
Professor DM would be great to play with. Robert Wardhaugh's playstyle seems a little too tough for my tastes. I like the idea that if your character dies, you're permanently out of the campaign, but it sounds kinda harsh.
Gygax doesn't have the best reputation here, which is probably why he hasn't been mentioned.
Wardhaugh allows you to have multiple characters though. You can have a character die and still have plenty more available. Once they’re all dead you’re out though, which would feel so terrible. And even if Gygax has lost some of his reputation he is why we are here today. Someone would have made a game like this eventually, but who knows what we would be playing right now.
I know what we would be playing right now. Giants and Gaols.
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Look at what you've done. You spoiled it. You have nobody to blame but yourself. Go sit and think about your actions.
Don't be mean. Rudeness is a vicious cycle, and it has to stop somewhere. Exceptions for things that are funny. Go to the current Competition of the Finest 'Brews! It's a cool place where cool people make cool things.
How I'm posting based on text formatting: Mod Hat Off - Mod Hat Also Off (I'm not a mod)
Question of the Day: If you could play D&D with anybody, dead or alive, who would be in your party?
The exact same group that I already have. :)
Except, since you said I have the choice, I'd prefer them dead.
I’d be inclined to agree, but I think I’d definitely want to play a game with the cast of Critical Role (and maybe Joe Manganiello) or with Professor DM of the channel Dungeon Craft. Then of course there’s the fellow up North running a 40 year long game. That would be fun to play in. And, how has no one said Gary Gygax yet?
Professor DM would be great to play with. Robert Wardhaugh's playstyle seems a little too tough for my tastes. I like the idea that if your character dies, you're permanently out of the campaign, but it sounds kinda harsh.
Gygax doesn't have the best reputation here, which is probably why he hasn't been mentioned.
Wardhaugh allows you to have multiple characters though. You can have a character die and still have plenty more available. Once they’re all dead you’re out though, which would feel so terrible. And even if Gygax has lost some of his reputation he is why we are here today. Someone would have made a game like this eventually, but who knows what we would be playing right now.
It's been a while since I've seen anything about Wardhaugh, so I don't recall him mentioning players having multiple characters but obviously I'm probably wrong. I like the idea of his setting, too. An alternate history Earth sounds great because of the sheer amount of cultures and mythologies one can draw from.
Yeah idk about Gygax. He allegedly advocated for eugenics and was reportedly super racist. Appreciate the art, not the artist.
There’s a whole host of historic and literary figures I considered writing, but I realised those were all folks I wanted on the list because it would be fascinating to spend time with them, not because they would necessarily make a good D&D party.
Limiting my selection to folks who play D&D: Dame Judi Dench would top out that list - she’s a brilliant and interesting person in her own right, and the fact that she played D&D with Karl Urban and Vin Diesel on the Chronicles of Riddick set, and reportedly DMs for her grandchildren is arguably the cutest D&D fact.
Even ignoring the fact that he was a eugenicist, believed stupid things like “women are biologically incapable of enjoying D&D”, and had a nasty habit of backstabbing his friends to improve the myth of his own reputation - each of which would disqualify someone from my tables - he honestly doesn’t seem like he would be a fun person to play with.
Gygax mostly invented and focused the mechanical, rules side of the game, coming from his background as a war game player. The actually fun parts of D&D - adding puzzles, traps, and all that happens outside of combat - came from Dave Arneson. Gygax’s control over the game was marked by a very aggressive DM v. Players dynamic, filled with micromanaging that seemed more about gatekeeping the hobby rather than folks having fun. No thanks.
I was just watching the Britbox show Beyond Paradise and noticed a few D&D books in the opening scene of episode two.
In what movie and TV shows have you seen D&D referenced? Not counting the D&D movies.
The most recent reference (though it was more of an entire scene) that comes to mind is Cobra Kai (no spoilers). There's a scene where a character is running a D&D game, his BBEG appears, and declares that the PCs take "8d12 of psychic damage". Not the best represtation of D&D, but the scene makes a point that he's a bad DM I guess.
The US version of Ghosts has an entire D&D episode in the first season
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Active characters:
Carric Aquissar, elven wannabe artist in his deconstructionist period (Archfey warlock) Lan Kidogo, mapach archaeologist and treasure hunter (Knowledge cleric) Mardan Ferres, elven private investigator obsessed with that one unsolved murder (Assassin rogue) Xhekhetiel, halfling survivor of a Betrayer Gods cult (Runechild sorcerer/fighter)
Playing D&D with Gygax and Arneson would be interesting because they both would provide a point of view that’s gone from D&D. (Not the misogynistic racist view, if Gygax had that. I’m not certain on that. Maybe I’ll do some research) I think playing with the creators would be the best way to experiment with the game and look at it from their point of view. I see the issues that some may have with the creators, but we can’t deny the power of the game they made and the effect it has had on modern culture. Plus, imagine playing in the first game of D&D
Just watch any 60's or 70's TV series or sitcom and you will see all the sexism and often the racism of the times. But we do not go out of our way attacking all of the people associated with those shows.
I have a feeling that people are attacking Gygax because he is associated with the game they love and want to expunge everything they hate from the game. Past present and in the future.
Question of the Day: If you could play D&D with anybody, dead or alive, who would be in your party?
I think Terry Pratchett, Mike Mignola, N. D. Wilson, Andrew Peterson, and maybe Tolkien would have been fun to play with. They would have such amazing characters and would make great DMs. Not sure if they would all work together, but it would be awesome.
Either that group or George Washington, Winston Churchill, William Shapespeare, Leonardo Da Vinci, Tolkien again, and Jack Black because that would be hilarious to watch that group play a nerdy game together.
There’s a whole host of historic and literary figures I considered writing, but I realised those were all folks I wanted on the list because it would be fascinating to spend time with them, not because they would necessarily make a good D&D party.
Limiting my selection to folks who play D&D: Dame Judi Dench would top out that list - she’s a brilliant and interesting person in her own right, and the fact that she played D&D with Karl Urban and Vin Diesel on the Chronicles of Riddick set, and reportedly DMs for her grandchildren is arguably the cutest D&D fact.
That is kind of what I meant. Usually the question involves who would you want to have dinner with or some such. I was dropping it into a familiar environment, instead of open talk or dinner, it would be a casual fun game where conversation happens.
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"Sooner or later, your Players are going to smash your railroad into a sandbox."
-Vedexent
"real life is a super high CR."
-OboeLauren
"............anybody got any potatoes? We could drop a potato in each hole an' see which ones get viciously mauled by horrible monsters?"
Just watch any 60's or 70's TV series or sitcom and you will see all the sexism and often the racism of the times. But we do not go out of our way attacking all of the people associated with those shows.
I have a feeling that people are attacking Gygax because he is associated with the game they love and want to expunge everything they hate from the game. Past present and in the future.
Sorry, but he wasn’t a creature of his times. Yes, there was racism and sexism in the 60s and 70s—but he went far beyond simply being racist and sexist in the vein of those decades. He was an outspoken supporter of “biological determinism” (“As I have often said, I am a biological determinist”—Gygax, in 2005)—the PR friendly way of saying “I am a eugenicist.”
By the 60s, eugenics/biological determinism was effectively dead due to the horrors inflicted in the Second World War by eugenicists and the subsequent research demonstrating the field to be basically pseudoscience.
So, nope. This isn’t a case of modern folks judging him by the standards of today—this is very much a case where, judging him by the standards of his own day, people would say his views were problematic.
Funny thing about being a creature of their times: it always carries with it an admission of failure to learn, to grow, and to improve on the part of the person so considered. I think of it as perhaps the greatest insult one can heap upon those passed on.
I met Gygax. I wouldn’t play in one of his games for any reason except filthy rich rewards in cash in the real world. GenCon was always a trip in the 80’s.
that said, I am realizing that I don’t have anyone from the past, and certainly no one dead, that I would be interested in playing a session or ten with. In huge part because, well, they are all creatures of their times, and I have enough intersections that I fill a whole demographic query alone, lol.
I would like to be able to bring back a few folks who drifted away over the years, though. Jerry, Bryn, Anita (but not her husband). The current group is essentially friends and family of the eight folks who all played back in the early 80’s. Getting the whole gang together again would probably get me weepy, lol.
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Only a DM since 1980 (3000+ Sessions) / PhD, MS, MA / Mixed, Bi, Trans, Woman / No longer welcome in the US, apparently
Wyrlde: Adventures in the Seven Cities .-=] Lore Book | Patreon | Wyrlde YT [=-. An original Setting for 5e, a whole solar system of adventure. Ongoing updates, exclusies, more. Not Talking About It / Dubbed The Oracle in the Cult of Mythology Nerds
I was just watching the Britbox show Beyond Paradise and noticed a few D&D books in the opening scene of episode two.
In what movie and TV shows have you seen D&D referenced? Not counting the D&D movies.
The most recent reference (though it was more of an entire scene) that comes to mind is Cobra Kai (no spoilers). There's a scene where a character is running a D&D game, his BBEG appears, and declares that the PCs take "8d12 of psychic damage". Not the best represtation of D&D, but the scene makes a point that he's a bad DM I guess.
The US version of Ghosts has an entire D&D episode in the first season
Neat.
I would have mentioned Stranger Things, but that would be way too obvious hah
Playing D&D with Gygax and Arneson would be interesting because they both would provide a point of view that’s gone from D&D. (Not the misogynistic racist view, if Gygax had that. I’m not certain on that. Maybe I’ll do some research) I think playing with the creators would be the best way to experiment with the game and look at it from their point of view. I see the issues that some may have with the creators, but we can’t deny the power of the game they made and the effect it has had on modern culture. Plus, imagine playing in the first game of D&D
Agreed. To have been part of such a significant piece of media would have been amazing
I'd love to invite Brennan Lee Mulligan to our group sometime. Of all the D&D-playing people I've seen on the internet (I probably haven't seen your fave), he seems like he'd be just a blast to play with.
I also think it would be amusing in a different way, to play with some of what society has decided are the smartest folks throughout history. Because I'm betting they would struggle. And it would be illuminating to meet them, especially outside of their element. How long would Albert Einstein take to pick a spell on his turn, do you think?
Playing D&D with Gygax and Arneson would be interesting because they both would provide a point of view that’s gone from D&D. (Not the misogynistic racist view, if Gygax had that. I’m not certain on that. Maybe I’ll do some research) I think playing with the creators would be the best way to experiment with the game and look at it from their point of view. I see the issues that some may have with the creators, but we can’t deny the power of the game they made and the effect it has had on modern culture. Plus, imagine playing in the first game of D&D
I can say without hesitation that they would absolutely go off on tangents about certain things, but only agree on two of them:
they would hate the entire set up of classes and subclasses. Arneson has made no bones of this in private since 3.5. They would both also slap down the entire multi class system.
Arneson likes the simpler d20, Gygax loved the hardest crunch possible and for dice to decide way more often than DMs. Neither thought much of probability mechanics until the mid 90’s, lol.
I mentioned gencon earlier, and in the early years you could actually play with them. Gygax was very much adversarial, Arneson was all about the big play but also “eh, you died, here’s a new character.”
I don’t think Gygax ever played that I saw as a player — strictly a DM, and Arneson was hard to spot at GenCon a lot of years.
I am sure there are other oldster types who went to GenCon that were older than I was (I was a teenager) here on DDB that have different takes, but that’s what I recall.
AD&D was Gygax’s House Rules, as well, so anything that deviated from it was hugely frowned upon. Hell, he was talked into 2e and unhappy about it — even just before he passed he was still angry about how he had been forced to put Monks in the main game — he really felt that OA was the way to go for that kind of thing, where a different kind of genre requires different kinds of archetypes.
honestly, I think he would win a lot of folks over to his way of thinking about rules after a couple convos where he “laid down the law like Moses on the mountain”. He was pushed out of everything because he had an ego, and was vindictive, way more than his other crap. But even that wouldn’t stop me (recall, I am a mixed race black girl, lol, so I got to see that up front and in my face).
now, I wouldn’t say I know him. All I can speak to is what I saw on fewer than a half dozen occasions, the longest being a four hour game session.
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Only a DM since 1980 (3000+ Sessions) / PhD, MS, MA / Mixed, Bi, Trans, Woman / No longer welcome in the US, apparently
Wyrlde: Adventures in the Seven Cities .-=] Lore Book | Patreon | Wyrlde YT [=-. An original Setting for 5e, a whole solar system of adventure. Ongoing updates, exclusies, more. Not Talking About It / Dubbed The Oracle in the Cult of Mythology Nerds
Question of the Day: If you could play D&D with anybody, dead or alive, who would be in your party?
Tolkien - so he could rip my world to shreds and I'd love it.
Weis & Hickman - so they could give pointers on excellent character development.
My father - just to have one more day.
Weis and Hickman. That’s a great one. I would love to play the new Dragonlance module with them and see them rip it to shreds and make it into a lore-accurate game.
The cast of Letterkenny. I'd probably have to run 2-3 tables.
Jander Sunstar is the thinking person's Drizzt, fight me.
Wardhaugh allows you to have multiple characters though. You can have a character die and still have plenty more available. Once they’re all dead you’re out though, which would feel so terrible. And even if Gygax has lost some of his reputation he is why we are here today. Someone would have made a game like this eventually, but who knows what we would be playing right now.
The most recent reference (though it was more of an entire scene) that comes to mind is Cobra Kai (no spoilers). There's a scene where a character is running a D&D game, his BBEG appears, and declares that the PCs take "8d12 of psychic damage". Not the best representation of D&D, but the scene makes a point that he's a bad DM I guess.
[REDACTED]
I know what we would be playing right now. Giants and Gaols.
Look at what you've done. You spoiled it. You have nobody to blame but yourself. Go sit and think about your actions.
Don't be mean. Rudeness is a vicious cycle, and it has to stop somewhere. Exceptions for things that are funny.
Go to the current Competition of the Finest 'Brews! It's a cool place where cool people make cool things.
How I'm posting based on text formatting: Mod Hat Off - Mod Hat Also Off (I'm not a mod)
It's been a while since I've seen anything about Wardhaugh, so I don't recall him mentioning players having multiple characters but obviously I'm probably wrong. I like the idea of his setting, too. An alternate history Earth sounds great because of the sheer amount of cultures and mythologies one can draw from.
Yeah idk about Gygax. He allegedly advocated for eugenics and was reportedly super racist. Appreciate the art, not the artist.
[REDACTED]
There’s a whole host of historic and literary figures I considered writing, but I realised those were all folks I wanted on the list because it would be fascinating to spend time with them, not because they would necessarily make a good D&D party.
Limiting my selection to folks who play D&D: Dame Judi Dench would top out that list - she’s a brilliant and interesting person in her own right, and the fact that she played D&D with Karl Urban and Vin Diesel on the Chronicles of Riddick set, and reportedly DMs for her grandchildren is arguably the cutest D&D fact.
Even ignoring the fact that he was a eugenicist, believed stupid things like “women are biologically incapable of enjoying D&D”, and had a nasty habit of backstabbing his friends to improve the myth of his own reputation - each of which would disqualify someone from my tables - he honestly doesn’t seem like he would be a fun person to play with.
Gygax mostly invented and focused the mechanical, rules side of the game, coming from his background as a war game player. The actually fun parts of D&D - adding puzzles, traps, and all that happens outside of combat - came from Dave Arneson. Gygax’s control over the game was marked by a very aggressive DM v. Players dynamic, filled with micromanaging that seemed more about gatekeeping the hobby rather than folks having fun. No thanks.
The US version of Ghosts has an entire D&D episode in the first season
Active characters:
Carric Aquissar, elven wannabe artist in his deconstructionist period (Archfey warlock)
Lan Kidogo, mapach archaeologist and treasure hunter (Knowledge cleric)
Mardan Ferres, elven private investigator obsessed with that one unsolved murder (Assassin rogue)
Xhekhetiel, halfling survivor of a Betrayer Gods cult (Runechild sorcerer/fighter)
Playing D&D with Gygax and Arneson would be interesting because they both would provide a point of view that’s gone from D&D. (Not the misogynistic racist view, if Gygax had that. I’m not certain on that. Maybe I’ll do some research) I think playing with the creators would be the best way to experiment with the game and look at it from their point of view. I see the issues that some may have with the creators, but we can’t deny the power of the game they made and the effect it has had on modern culture. Plus, imagine playing in the first game of D&D
As for Gygax. He was a creature of his times.
Just watch any 60's or 70's TV series or sitcom and you will see all the sexism and often the racism of the times.
But we do not go out of our way attacking all of the people associated with those shows.
I have a feeling that people are attacking Gygax because he is associated with the game they love and want to expunge everything they hate from the game. Past present and in the future.
I think Terry Pratchett, Mike Mignola, N. D. Wilson, Andrew Peterson, and maybe Tolkien would have been fun to play with. They would have such amazing characters and would make great DMs. Not sure if they would all work together, but it would be awesome.
Either that group or George Washington, Winston Churchill, William Shapespeare, Leonardo Da Vinci, Tolkien again, and Jack Black because that would be hilarious to watch that group play a nerdy game together.
That is kind of what I meant. Usually the question involves who would you want to have dinner with or some such. I was dropping it into a familiar environment, instead of open talk or dinner, it would be a casual fun game where conversation happens.
"Sooner or later, your Players are going to smash your railroad into a sandbox."
-Vedexent
"real life is a super high CR."
-OboeLauren
"............anybody got any potatoes? We could drop a potato in each hole an' see which ones get viciously mauled by horrible monsters?"
-Ilyara Thundertale
Sorry, but he wasn’t a creature of his times. Yes, there was racism and sexism in the 60s and 70s—but he went far beyond simply being racist and sexist in the vein of those decades. He was an outspoken supporter of “biological determinism” (“As I have often said, I am a biological determinist”—Gygax, in 2005)—the PR friendly way of saying “I am a eugenicist.”
By the 60s, eugenics/biological determinism was effectively dead due to the horrors inflicted in the Second World War by eugenicists and the subsequent research demonstrating the field to be basically pseudoscience.
So, nope. This isn’t a case of modern folks judging him by the standards of today—this is very much a case where, judging him by the standards of his own day, people would say his views were problematic.
Funny thing about being a creature of their times: it always carries with it an admission of failure to learn, to grow, and to improve on the part of the person so considered. I think of it as perhaps the greatest insult one can heap upon those passed on.
I met Gygax. I wouldn’t play in one of his games for any reason except filthy rich rewards in cash in the real world. GenCon was always a trip in the 80’s.
that said, I am realizing that I don’t have anyone from the past, and certainly no one dead, that I would be interested in playing a session or ten with. In huge part because, well, they are all creatures of their times, and I have enough intersections that I fill a whole demographic query alone, lol.
I would like to be able to bring back a few folks who drifted away over the years, though. Jerry, Bryn, Anita (but not her husband). The current group is essentially friends and family of the eight folks who all played back in the early 80’s. Getting the whole gang together again would probably get me weepy, lol.
Only a DM since 1980 (3000+ Sessions) / PhD, MS, MA / Mixed, Bi, Trans, Woman / No longer welcome in the US, apparently
Wyrlde: Adventures in the Seven Cities
.-=] Lore Book | Patreon | Wyrlde YT [=-.
An original Setting for 5e, a whole solar system of adventure. Ongoing updates, exclusies, more.
Not Talking About It / Dubbed The Oracle in the Cult of Mythology Nerds
Neat.
I would have mentioned Stranger Things, but that would be way too obvious hah
[REDACTED]
Agreed. To have been part of such a significant piece of media would have been amazing
[REDACTED]
Tolkien - so he could rip my world to shreds and I'd love it.
Weis & Hickman - so they could give pointers on excellent character development.
My father - just to have one more day.
Check out my publication on DMs Guild: https://www.dmsguild.com/browse.php?author=Tawmis%20Logue
Check out my comedy web series - Neverending Nights: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Wr4-u9-zw0&list=PLbRG7dzFI-u3EJd0usasgDrrFO3mZ1lOZ
Need a character story/background written up? I do it for free (but also take donations!) - https://forums.giantitp.com/showthread.php?591882-Need-a-character-background-written-up
I'd love to invite Brennan Lee Mulligan to our group sometime. Of all the D&D-playing people I've seen on the internet (I probably haven't seen your fave), he seems like he'd be just a blast to play with.
I also think it would be amusing in a different way, to play with some of what society has decided are the smartest folks throughout history. Because I'm betting they would struggle. And it would be illuminating to meet them, especially outside of their element. How long would Albert Einstein take to pick a spell on his turn, do you think?
I can say without hesitation that they would absolutely go off on tangents about certain things, but only agree on two of them:
they would hate the entire set up of classes and subclasses. Arneson has made no bones of this in private since 3.5. They would both also slap down the entire multi class system.
Arneson likes the simpler d20, Gygax loved the hardest crunch possible and for dice to decide way more often than DMs. Neither thought much of probability mechanics until the mid 90’s, lol.
I mentioned gencon earlier, and in the early years you could actually play with them. Gygax was very much adversarial, Arneson was all about the big play but also “eh, you died, here’s a new character.”
I don’t think Gygax ever played that I saw as a player — strictly a DM, and Arneson was hard to spot at GenCon a lot of years.
I am sure there are other oldster types who went to GenCon that were older than I was (I was a teenager) here on DDB that have different takes, but that’s what I recall.
AD&D was Gygax’s House Rules, as well, so anything that deviated from it was hugely frowned upon. Hell, he was talked into 2e and unhappy about it — even just before he passed he was still angry about how he had been forced to put Monks in the main game — he really felt that OA was the way to go for that kind of thing, where a different kind of genre requires different kinds of archetypes.
honestly, I think he would win a lot of folks over to his way of thinking about rules after a couple convos where he “laid down the law like Moses on the mountain”. He was pushed out of everything because he had an ego, and was vindictive, way more than his other crap. But even that wouldn’t stop me (recall, I am a mixed race black girl, lol, so I got to see that up front and in my face).
now, I wouldn’t say I know him. All I can speak to is what I saw on fewer than a half dozen occasions, the longest being a four hour game session.
Only a DM since 1980 (3000+ Sessions) / PhD, MS, MA / Mixed, Bi, Trans, Woman / No longer welcome in the US, apparently
Wyrlde: Adventures in the Seven Cities
.-=] Lore Book | Patreon | Wyrlde YT [=-.
An original Setting for 5e, a whole solar system of adventure. Ongoing updates, exclusies, more.
Not Talking About It / Dubbed The Oracle in the Cult of Mythology Nerds
Weis and Hickman. That’s a great one. I would love to play the new Dragonlance module with them and see them rip it to shreds and make it into a lore-accurate game.
Don't hate that idea. Mostly because of the "Oh, I am a level 1 cleric. PSYCHE! From here on out, I am going full wizard with nice armor."
Check out my publication on DMs Guild: https://www.dmsguild.com/browse.php?author=Tawmis%20Logue
Check out my comedy web series - Neverending Nights: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Wr4-u9-zw0&list=PLbRG7dzFI-u3EJd0usasgDrrFO3mZ1lOZ
Need a character story/background written up? I do it for free (but also take donations!) - https://forums.giantitp.com/showthread.php?591882-Need-a-character-background-written-up