Gosh. I really thought "body horror" meant something pervy. Add to this "baby shower", "hump day", "pot luck" (well, that's not so bad) and other things that I've dirty-minded, and my brain is really a thriving cess pit. :)
If you're looking to do horror first and foremost, is there any particular reason why it has to be D&D? While I think you can shoehorn horror into D&D reasonably well, it's still going to be epic fantasy first with horror elements. If that's what you're looking for, then that's cool, but there are other games that focus primarily on horror and do it really well.
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DM: The Cult of the Crystal Spider (Currently playing Storm King's Thunder) Player: The Knuckles of Arth - Lemire (Tiefling Rogue 5/Fighter 1)
In some cases, having one of the characters be "in on it" can be helpful. In a larger campaign, for example, pulling one person aside and saying "just so you know, you've been replaced by an imposter, the real you is in a cage, here's how to act it out" would be an excellent way to scare them. It would be so effective, that in later campaigns, you could conspicuously pull players aside to talk about the weather and make everyone suspicious.
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Gosh. I really thought "body horror" meant something pervy. Add to this "baby shower", "hump day", "pot luck" (well, that's not so bad) and other things that I've dirty-minded, and my brain is really a thriving cess pit. :)
Is me
I want the story where you thought 'Baby shower' was in any way sexual
Start the story like this ...
You wake some one has stolen all your gear and stuff, o yeah the monsters are in the same room!
Me too... what happened?
hello
If you're looking to do horror first and foremost, is there any particular reason why it has to be D&D? While I think you can shoehorn horror into D&D reasonably well, it's still going to be epic fantasy first with horror elements. If that's what you're looking for, then that's cool, but there are other games that focus primarily on horror and do it really well.
DM: The Cult of the Crystal Spider (Currently playing Storm King's Thunder)
Player: The Knuckles of Arth - Lemire (Tiefling Rogue 5/Fighter 1)
In some cases, having one of the characters be "in on it" can be helpful. In a larger campaign, for example, pulling one person aside and saying "just so you know, you've been replaced by an imposter, the real you is in a cage, here's how to act it out" would be an excellent way to scare them. It would be so effective, that in later campaigns, you could conspicuously pull players aside to talk about the weather and make everyone suspicious.