I wanna hear about all the good demon babies people have. 😈
her name is Areola and I didn’t get to play her for very long but she’s a bard who plays an accordion because it was the most ridiculous instrument my DM would let me get away with
Pan chaotic swashbuckler who is fond of fucking with people for kicks. He’s called Francois and I live him
A bad boy :0
Her name is Primrose and she’s a pink bard she has this warped perception of how to do good for the world and it’s people. She’s very Robin Hood-esque.
I’m a Tiefling turned so by a pact with an Archfiend that masqueraded as a good aligned god. I’m an Oath of Treachery Paladin, and I’m here to ABSOLUTELY MURDER the Archfiend that tricked me and stole my livelihood away.
Girls in big plate armor wielding giant axes is like my thiiiiiing.
Have a Tiefling based off of one of my OCs. He is one of those subraces with Wings so he looks even more demonic. He flirts with everyone who will let him and somehow managed to find a chainmail with a V-neck in it. He is a Vengeance Paladin that cares about his fellow companions and being fabulous while doing so.
Hey guys! My brother @yakobhale-art wrote a really cool book!
If you liked my book Table Fables, then this book is right up your ally. Character Compendium is a massive 400+ page book that contains over 800 totally illustrated and interesting characters for use in Dungeons and Dragons or any other fantasy tabletop game!
This is especially helpful if, for example, your players like to capture bandits instead of killing them like they’re supposed to. Coming up with a fleshed-out bandit NPC in twenty seconds is tough. That’s where this book comes into play! Just snatch a character out of the bandit section and BAM – instant NPC.
There are sections for bandits, barkeeps, guards, wizards, royals, mercenaries, peasants and more – because you never know when your party may decide to bring the local barkeep on the quest with them (instead of ignoring them like good players should 😡
Anyway, thanks for looking! It’s super cool and useful and I hope you guys enjoy!
A continued update on D&D 5e’s inclusivity – went to a game store last night and, flipping through the new Dragon Heist module, saw this incredibly wonderful sidebar.
Not only is it really respectful and well-written (which on its own would be amazing – this is such a beautiful way to talk about trans individuals, and feels completely genuine), but it’s such a better and kinder version of the clunkier attempt to do something similar in the Player’s Handbook, which tells me that WotC has to have been listening to the community and learning, and that’s a level of investment in making people feel welcome and a sense of belonging playing this game that I am emotional about seeing in action.