• Fondots@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    Right? Don’t get me wrong, I have some cool stories, and I don’t blame people for being more interested in those than tales from my hiking trips or D&D game or hearing about my latest attempt at woodworking or whatever, but I’d rather talk about those.

    • reflex@kbin.social
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      11 months ago

      Well, I’ll take a D&D story too if you don’t mind.

      My current group is playing Schedules & Conflicts so, got an itch u noe?

      • Fondots@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        Oof, I feel that, my group hasn’t been able to get our shit together to have a proper session in months.

        A while back I played in my friend’s home-brew setting as Lotor the All-Beard, a raccoon pirate, known as the All-beard because he was covered in fur, so he was all beard.

        Lotor was a dirty, chaotic, moron, and throughout the entire campaign the dice gods smiled upon him, and nearly every harebrained scheme he came up with somehow managed to work out somehow.

        He did not speak the common tongue, and was also illiterate (but a master of forgery somehow, he couldn’t read the documents he forged, but with a handwriting sample and someone else to put the words together for him he made it work) so the main way he communicated with the rest of the world was with the aid of his talking parrot, Polly, acting as a translator (and also his accountant, secretary, and numerous other roles that Lotor lacked the smarts to do himself.) Polly was a very intelligent bird who didn’t much care for his idiot master, and although it was brought up numerous times, it never stuck Lotor as strange that polly could actually talk and not just mimic speech, he always just shrugged it off as “parrots can talk.” Many hints were dropped over the course of the game that there was more to Polly than met the eye, like a magic lantern that made Polly cast a human-shaped shadow, and every last hint went straight over Lotor’s head. At the end of the campaign it was revealed that Polly was a long-missing archmage who’s absence was fairly central to the overarching lore of the world, he’d had his memories erased and transformed into a parrot by the big bad, and through a series of unlikely events had eventually found his way to a curio shop where Lotor purchased him because he thought it was neat.

        • Nepenthe@kbin.social
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          11 months ago

          Fantastic. That also had to be so painful for the rest of the party to watch.

          May I also have a D&D story and/or perhaps a picture of some woodworking about which you are proud? Or at which you have at least failed at hard enough to be funny?

          I love listening to people talk about their hobbies. I may not understand a third of it, but the passionate energy someone gets when they’re all excited is contagious

          • Fondots@lemmy.world
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            11 months ago

            Here’s 2 thing im particularly proud of, even if they’re a bit simple. My wife took up book binding during the pandemic (who didn’t pick up some new hobbies then?) And she needed a book press and sewing frame, so I made them for her

            https://ibb.co/3WqKJw2 https://ibb.co/Sy9fBrZ

            I apologize for the janky image host, imgur didn’t want to work for me today and this was my first Google result for free image hosting.

            Ignore the trash and such scattered around on the desk in the background.

            I learned a lot making the sewing frame in particular, mostly how much I suck at using a router, and after botching it a couple times I actually ended up chiseling out that slot in the front by hand.

            I’d do some things differently if I were remaking them today, I’d probably make the press shorter, it doesn’t really need to be as tall as it is, and I had some big ideas for the sewing frame like some moveable fences to make sure the book is square that I ended up abandoning

          • Fondots@lemmy.world
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            11 months ago

            He did, and I believe he ended up gifting Lotor some magic doodad to translate for him in the future