It does work well. One player in our Underdark campaign is a reborn monstrous Sorlock. A curse in the campaign has granted the sorlock the ability to see the Maker of the world. We thought the character/player was talking toward the heavens. The heavens - DM answered. The rest of the players noticed the DM screen the DM and player worked on together. The name burned on the barrel oak panels with black, iron hinges - "The Maker." Well played. Well played. 29 sessions, about 80 hours into the campaign, when the sorlock cussing out the darkness and the Maker, is still amusing and done in fun when he roles a 1, & all the Maker's doing. He's still trying to get this band of vagabonds to help him overthrow the Maker, "One of these days You will be down here amongst Us. One day! Maker!." "§^_^&°;'
@@newfanguyjackson4858Yeah, it's called Stranger Than Fiction. Starts hearing the narrator who then predicts his death, so he has to try and track them down and stop it.
@@Johnnie-t7e ACTUALLY depends on the time ALOT happened around the west and in The west without the west REALLY changing so it's COMPLETELY possibly this is a nuance view or a tab behind the times and ACCORDING to the narrator it's like RIGHT in the middle
@@Johnnie-t7e their own life was shtty, they don't have the time to fight for others when they need to fight for themselves That's why they only ok with it rather fight for them
Finally, someone acknowledges that it would be a little strange to see African Americans active and successful in an 1860-1890 white dominated community. So many movies just act like this was a very common thing, but it really wasn't. That's not to say a black bartender in an 1880 all white saloon town is unheard of. It's just not as common as Hollywood likes to think.