If you like D&D, but only want to listen to it (podcast), and want to support small creators, I’d recommend listening to Death By Dice on Spotify or Apple Podcasts (or other places).
It’s a podcast run by a group of teenage friends retelling their campaign adventures in less than thirty minutes an episode while learning about the player, their character, and the world the characters live in.
There are currently seven episodes (one per player). The campaign’s Dungeon Master, Rufus, hosts each episode with a different player, where we learn about little about each character, player, and how they deal with what Rufus throws at them during the sessions.
Very entertaining, would recommend listening and rating
The question: what are you thinking about?
My answer:
headcanons for my characters
or
something really existential to the point that it disturbs the average person, including myself
Sometimes it’s both!
Being from Massachusetts is the only reason I know how to pronounce Worcestershire sauce. Worcester, MA has conditioned me to have “woostah” or “wooster” (I don’t have a heavy accent) as a possible pronunciation of that combo of letters
I don’t care if it’s originally British or not, Massachusetts taught me well
It also makes it a lot harder to spell from memory. Took me five tries in this post
When in doubt, stay away from the main story and think about what those other random OCs of yours can do, accidentally make an entire story for them, want to write it into its own book/series, and finally realize there’s no plot. The only reason you haven’t done anything else with them is because you don’t want to get rid of them. Writer issues.
Me, in reference to a D&D character: He’s just a little guy!
Normal Person: That “little guy” could easily kill you. He’s not even that short
Me: Leave me and my little depressed tiefling alone!
EPIC: The Musical is a fucking bomb. Seriously, it’s good
but also, listening to it all the way through is not helpful in trying to remember the songs, especially when the brain switches up the lyrics
My brain went: “Let’s see where you’ve been! When does a man become a meteor?” And I’m like “No, it doesn’t work that way.” And the visual in my head is Mr. Jalapeño shoving MICO then the cast rowing during the livestream of the cast listening to it
If anyone asks me what I’m writing, I will say nothing. But in a conversation that I can use to talk about my writing, I will take that opportunity.
That feeling when you research/write a lot about something that’s only going to be mentioned for a sentence for so
reblog to diminish the horrors from the person you reblogged from
Writer, Queer, Artist, they/he, MinorToo. Many. God. Damn. FandomsI post on Mondays (mostly)
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