We are by no means great at D&D, but by golly sometimes we can put on a good show. Tune in for something that feels more real and like a game you could play at your very own table! Want in on the action? Tune in to the streams or comment on the videos and such and maybe we can work things out. I think guest characters are real neato and I appreciate any fans we get.
Lowly Anon we have two players with an evil alignment, one who is neutral (but close to being evil according to our GM) and then there's my chaotic good pacifist oracle healer. She cries a lot...
Oh my God, I love this to bits. Just as Jennifer said, general enough to be funny, but leaving me wanting to know more about your party. My group did this too, actually, and I love it the concept so much. It mostly features our bard that acts like a toddler and my character, a 30-something Yuan-Ti fighter who is tired of everything.
The adventure I’m on our entire party is chaotic except for one neutral good character. We also have a chaotic evil cleric Dragonborn and a Yule goat. Oh yeah and one of my party members found three halfling children on the train (it was built by dwarves) and pretty much adopted them. And then my character dyed their hair when he was babysitting them. Oh yeah and he played careless whisper on the lute to a random couple on the train. The point is I’m not a stranger to fuckin weird dnd happenings
JaysArtEscape Oh, unlike my party who has three neutral good characters and two who are chaotic. Exhibit A: A Chaotic Lawful Half-Elf Sorcerer whose health is so low she needs to drink a health potion every few encounters to stay alive and... Exhibit B: ...a Chaotic Good Forest Gnome Rogue who’s probably like Dobby the House Elf with parent issues.
Thank you so much everyone who watched the video, and especially to people to commented, liked a comment, liked the video, or subscribed! I honestly thought this video would get like... 10 views. Not over 20,000 (at the time of writing this). I'm considering streaming through the channel (maybe if I have time, I'll edit the streams to something more easily consumable). And since a lot of you guys are curious about the party, I thought I'd give you guys some info! There's 7 people in our group, including the DM and I. Right after I made this video someone new joined our group. Cain is a human paladin played by me. Baldr was Austin's former PC, a dwarf bard/warlock - who he decided to replace with a ratfolk fighter named Whiskers. Jegr is a simic hybrid druid, and was the DM's, Donavan's, PC before someone new joined our group, retiring Jegr to an NPC. Amaya is an aasimar warlock/paladin. Wurdzag is an orc warlock. Jared is a tabaxi monk (name was picked by the random generator on dndbeyond, and she didn't have the heart to change it) and has become kind of a meme. She's quiet but gets amazing rolls in combat and murders everything. Our new member plays a weird old kalashtar bard named Asaphin. Kleppo is a God and also an NPC. Holzi was an NPC from our previous campaign, a goblin that we kidnapped who didn't have a tongue. Kleppo gave us a magical tongue for him that allowed him to speak, in exchange for spreading word of his church. The tongue would make him fall in love with whoever put it in - which was Eldon (same player as Wurdzag), a gnome barbarian who was really the one that kidnapped Holzi (my PC at the time, Vashir, just helped). The two were bros and Holzi is a crazy savage goblin that we all loved.
@@MinerSetbackGaming The DM here. As a huge fan of MTG and of D&D, I couldn't help but to start integrating the Ravnica materials into my homebrew world. While the flavor of most everything has changed (without almost any of my players even knowing the origins of the content to begin with), I find that it is really easy to absorb the content even outside of a Ravnica campaign if it is in the right setting. For example, the party is currently in a kingdom that is combining magic and steam technology in a very similar way to the Izzet League. I am hoping that this leads to some fun shenanigans in the future.
This comp was already awesome, but once I realized that these were based on real events that happened in campaigns, and that this was the DM essentially just roasting the players, it became 15 times better lmaoo
Absurd films so funny story. I introduced them to The Sword of High Heavens. It’s a magical sword made out of cardboard. When the wielder is high on marijuana, the cardboard sword rolls +7 to hit and deals 7 damage on a hot. None of them wanted to use it. Nor would they let Holzi use it.
I started my DND campaign today as a DM who was new to the game with players who didn't know how to play, it was the blind leading the blind but they still had fun.
I started DMing after playing for 3 sessions. And now I’ve inspired this vine comp. A fair warning, it has been 7 years since I was last a player. DMing is both something you just caught up in and enjoy, so I hope it treats you well!