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Mar. 7th, 2010 10:45 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I found a new D&D group about a month ago. They play at a local comic shop once a week. It took a couple of weeks to fall into the social rhythms of the group, and they still make references to other friends that I don't know, but it's been a lot of fun to play.
When Alai had the big conversation about designing his new campaign setting, we talked about the place of religion in these abstract fantasy worlds. D&D has a pantheon, but it doesn't really take it seriously- even though clerics have long been a key part of the game and in 4E the divine power source is an even more prominent part of the game. The Gods are present but they don't inspire much faith, unless you're a follower of a particular deity. The religion of the game is in the background of the setting in a way that I don't think is true to the way people experience religion. And in particular, monotheism is never considered a possibility.
So when I crafted my character, trying to break out of usual D&D ways of thinking about religion was part of my character concept. Kelin Rolfsson, a Dwarven Bard, is a member of a monotheistic splinter sect that believes that Moradin is the one true God.
The rest of the party is more or less normal D&D religious. We have a Paladin of Corellon who has no problem with there being other deities, a druid who communes with various natural spirits, various characters with minimal or perfunctory connection to different Gods... but the insertion of Kelin and my insistence that his heretical (and illogical) religion is a core part of who he is has totally altered the character of the game. When the party camps out in a tavern searching for information, we argue religion. When we're in battle and need to make a moral decision, we ask each other what our Gods expect of us- and whether that even matters.
I told our Storm Warden Goliath that the polytheistic pantheon is a human conspiracy and he responded, "But I'm not human." To which Kelin retorted "So why are you buying into their conspiracies?"
In general, our game isn't very intense. We have a mechanic called 'fanmail' that gives in-game benefits for sharp one-liners that flatten out the deadliness of the game. I can't imagine Alai would call our game 'old school'. But I love the dynamic that putting some time and thought into the religious makeup of the world has engendered.
When Alai had the big conversation about designing his new campaign setting, we talked about the place of religion in these abstract fantasy worlds. D&D has a pantheon, but it doesn't really take it seriously- even though clerics have long been a key part of the game and in 4E the divine power source is an even more prominent part of the game. The Gods are present but they don't inspire much faith, unless you're a follower of a particular deity. The religion of the game is in the background of the setting in a way that I don't think is true to the way people experience religion. And in particular, monotheism is never considered a possibility.
So when I crafted my character, trying to break out of usual D&D ways of thinking about religion was part of my character concept. Kelin Rolfsson, a Dwarven Bard, is a member of a monotheistic splinter sect that believes that Moradin is the one true God.
The rest of the party is more or less normal D&D religious. We have a Paladin of Corellon who has no problem with there being other deities, a druid who communes with various natural spirits, various characters with minimal or perfunctory connection to different Gods... but the insertion of Kelin and my insistence that his heretical (and illogical) religion is a core part of who he is has totally altered the character of the game. When the party camps out in a tavern searching for information, we argue religion. When we're in battle and need to make a moral decision, we ask each other what our Gods expect of us- and whether that even matters.
I told our Storm Warden Goliath that the polytheistic pantheon is a human conspiracy and he responded, "But I'm not human." To which Kelin retorted "So why are you buying into their conspiracies?"
In general, our game isn't very intense. We have a mechanic called 'fanmail' that gives in-game benefits for sharp one-liners that flatten out the deadliness of the game. I can't imagine Alai would call our game 'old school'. But I love the dynamic that putting some time and thought into the religious makeup of the world has engendered.