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8 months ago ::
Oct 20, 2012 - 2:54AM
#11
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Date Joined:
Apr 24, 2010
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I did the best thing ever for a voice.. I played a mute rogue.... here's the kicker. He was a teenager in puberty.
My speech patterns involved lots of middle fingers and angry stares.
No one really knew his name So he just went by Mr. Mumble.
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6 months ago ::
Dec 14, 2012 - 7:35AM
#12
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I primarily play online through Roll20 and Skype, so having a unique character voice makes it easier to differentiate between IC and OOC speech when talking. "Okay, my turn? Joren goes like "Ye picked the wrong dwarf to mess with!" as he swings his maul, using..." It's mostly for fun, though. I don't overdo it, it's only for short sentences. When talking with an NPC, I mostly use my regular voice.
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5 months ago ::
Dec 20, 2012 - 12:33PM
#13
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Date Joined:
May 18, 2012
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I use different voices and accents for my characters. My most notable are a Shade Wizard with an English accent, a Halfling Rogue with a slight Irish accent, and a Dwarf Paladin with a Scottish accent. I also have a Shardmind Artificer that (according to a friend of mine) sounds almost exactly like Starfire from Teen Titans...
Lots of personality test results Spoiler:
Show
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5 months ago ::
Dec 26, 2012 - 9:25AM
#14
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Date Joined:
Jan 11, 2012
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so my last campagin i was a warforged in a town that was racist against warforged, so i started going aroundstating how people were racist motherf******* and i took on a sterotypical black person voice the rest of the session. i worked out well because i started a movement for warorged rights later on
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5 months ago ::
Jan 03, 2013 - 12:26PM
#15
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I used to do it a lot more. My current group has been more interested in the tactical aspect of the gameplay than the roleplaying end of things, so I haven't been talking in character as much, either as a DM or a player. We just traded out a few players, so that might change.
"When Friday comes, we'll all call rats fish." D&D Outsider
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