I’m a semi-secretive LARPer. I pack my stuff at night, don’t talk to my coworkers about it, and just go about my life as if I don’t.
I’ve found people are pretty judgy about it, so I just don’t mention that I enjoy getting into a neat costume, playing some little mini-games, having a drink or six, camping, and (most importantly) seeing my friends once a month in a structured activity.
It’s fun stuff if you find the right group. That last part is hard.
Honestly, I don’t know why people rip on other people’s hobbies just because it’s something they wouldn’t do. As if their opinion has any bearing on other people’s happiness. I’m glad you’ve found something that makes you happy and gets you out of the house.
Yep, pretty much that. Some of the bigger groups with lore spanning decades by now, written by in game historians and smaller meetings besides the big cons to act out little side stories. It is awesome and tbh did a lot for my ability to go up to and interact openly with people I don’t know.
Yep. People that don’t want to or can’t commit as much time or as regularly often choose to play NPCs. There’s a DM or a DM committee on site that observes the game directly or through their NPCs and uses the NPCs to steer the story (which can be hard, because proverbially, every plan is excellent until it meets the players).
Sometimes they’ll stage little or big events for players, e.g. if a player has let them know that he wants to kill a char, that is always a great opportunity for a neat send-off. Maybe the char is murdered during a banquet to make the other players aware of a treason subplot or he gets to save another character during a road robbery at the expense of his own life or something like that, that goes into the in game history books.
I’m a semi-secretive LARPer. I pack my stuff at night, don’t talk to my coworkers about it, and just go about my life as if I don’t.
I’ve found people are pretty judgy about it, so I just don’t mention that I enjoy getting into a neat costume, playing some little mini-games, having a drink or six, camping, and (most importantly) seeing my friends once a month in a structured activity.
It’s fun stuff if you find the right group. That last part is hard.
Honestly, I don’t know why people rip on other people’s hobbies just because it’s something they wouldn’t do. As if their opinion has any bearing on other people’s happiness. I’m glad you’ve found something that makes you happy and gets you out of the house.
Is that a Role Play game in real life, or what?
Yep, pretty much that. Some of the bigger groups with lore spanning decades by now, written by in game historians and smaller meetings besides the big cons to act out little side stories. It is awesome and tbh did a lot for my ability to go up to and interact openly with people I don’t know.
But how does it work. I mean, you sometimes are an NPC and sometimes you are a player?
Yep. People that don’t want to or can’t commit as much time or as regularly often choose to play NPCs. There’s a DM or a DM committee on site that observes the game directly or through their NPCs and uses the NPCs to steer the story (which can be hard, because proverbially, every plan is excellent until it meets the players).
Sometimes they’ll stage little or big events for players, e.g. if a player has let them know that he wants to kill a char, that is always a great opportunity for a neat send-off. Maybe the char is murdered during a banquet to make the other players aware of a treason subplot or he gets to save another character during a road robbery at the expense of his own life or something like that, that goes into the in game history books.