I am the kind of guy who writes pages of character backgrounds for my characters. Some of them probably qualify as short stories. Sometimes they are written from a first person point of view, other times in the form of a journal, occasionally from a third person omniscient or the point of view of another character in the story. I feel I need to write these backgrounds in order to properly play my character. Even in the MMORPG City of Heroes, where I never played with deep role-players, each of my ‘toons’ had surprisingly detailed character backgrounds.
I realize not everyone plays this way. When I am running games getting character backgrounds from some of my players is like pulling teeth. Often players will present me with character backgrounds no more complex than “I grew up in a peasant village and when I was old enough I left to find my fortune”. That is OK, everyone has a different playing style.
Still, I like games that encourage characters to develop their background a bit. Probably the first game I encountered that did this was Warhammer Fantasy in which your character development was tied to your career path. Knowing that your character was a rat catcher or a merchant before they began adventuring wasn’t much, but it was something. Last Unicorn Games short-lived Star Trek: The Next Generation RPG took a similar path, where during character generation you would take a number of ‘tours’ on previous starships to determine your skillset. Maybe you spent a tour on the USS Hood as a security officer even though you were in command now so you were handy with a phaser.
I think my favorite take on this mechanic so far is in 13th Age. During character creation you allocate a number of points to backgrounds. Rather than specific skills you might say you spent time as a cat-burglar, a guild mage, or a merchant. Maybe you were a poacher (4 points) who was drafted as a soldier (2 points) and then became a animal trainer (2 points) when you got out. Rather than have a specific list of skills, you roll and add an appropriate ability modifier plus points in your background where you would roll a skill check in D&D. If the party needed to track someone through the woods and one character had a poacher background while another had a bounty hunter background, both could make the roll using their background points plus their wisdom modifier. However, if they needed to tie up a captive probably only the bounty hunter background would be applicable.
During the D&D Next playtest, I always thought this system would be easy to implement as a house rule. D&D Next was already more skill light than D&D 3e or D&D 4e after all. So I was pleased to hear that at Origins there was talk of an optional module that would use backgrounds instead of skills in a similar manner. Assuming it is well implemented, I would definitely use that option in any D&D 5e games I run.
Or I guess I could just run a 13th Age instead. It really is a fun system.
2 comments:
You are really cooking Rob. Good article. i am waiting for the DMG to see haw they implement that too. Keep writing because they are still working on the DMG.
Well thank you for your Origins field report on the last Lords of Tyr podcast. It is what inspired this post.
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