I am thinking of playing a gnomish artificer. I am planning on role playing him as someone who has lived sheltered/isolated from other cultures, but is now out in the world adventuring. What are some pranks his fellow gnomes would play on him to trick him into believing? Think like asking a friend to go to an auto part store and ask for blinker fluid or elbow grease.
Dragonborn never celebrate their birthdays ... the breath weapon would destroy the cake when they blow out candles
Not so much a prank, but there could be some (relatively innocent) internalized assumptions they have of the other races from growing up only around gnomes.
Humans act fast, talk fast, and never think things through, because they don't have time in their short lives. Maybe they've only ever met wood elves, and assume all elves are wood elves. That sorta thing.
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I know what you're thinking: "In that flurry of blows, did he use all his ki points, or save one?" Well, are ya feeling lucky, punk?
I am thinking of playing a gnomish artificer. I am planning on role playing him as someone who has lived sheltered/isolated from other cultures, but is now out in the world adventuring. What are some pranks his fellow gnomes would play on him to trick him into believing? Think like asking a friend to go to an auto part store and ask for blinker fluid or elbow grease.
Dragonborn never celebrate their birthdays ... the breath weapon would destroy the cake when they blow out candles
Not so much a prank, but there could be some (relatively innocent) internalized assumptions they have of the other races from growing up only around gnomes.
Humans act fast, talk fast, and never think things through, because they don't have time in their short lives. Maybe they've only ever met wood elves, and assume all elves are wood elves. That sorta thing.
I know what you're thinking: "In that flurry of blows, did he use all his ki points, or save one?" Well, are ya feeling lucky, punk?
How about believing that dwarves hatch from rocks?
Find your own truth, choose your enemies carefully, and never deal with a dragon.
"Canon" is what's factual to D&D lore. "Cannon" is what you're going to be shot with if you keep getting the word wrong.