Scrivere Club
unisciti
Fanpop
New Post
Explore Fanpop
posted by axemnas
Role playing o Rping as most of the community calls it. Almost everyone's done it one way o another whether they realize it o not. Remember those days when you'd pretend te were a movie character o a prince/princess o a pirate o whatever. te were role playing in a since. Now days when te hear the word role playing te probably think things like War Craft, stella, star Craft, Nights and Dragons, Toontown, etc..
Something you've probably never figured however, is rping in relation to writing. Writing, that's all rping basically is. It's just Scrivere a collaborative story from different points of view and interacting.
Rping pre-established plot o not can be a lot of fun and very productive. Especially when writing, te can create a place and really get a feel for the setting, a character, o even play with plot ideas. Through rping I have fleshed out- make a character più realistic o 3D. Numerous characters in half the time. te can place them in numerous settings and think about what they would do. te can literally be inside your character's head do what te think they might would do, say what they might would say. Learn a outcome you've never figured before.
Rping allows te to persue things with your character like a senario. Say there is a zombie attack would your character be più likely to stay where they are o help. Would they argue with everyone o get something done. This one character I have was designed for the 30's. He was a basic cop with a German Shepard dog who Lost his parents when he was 12. After rping with him in the present day, the 1850's and the future in a variety of scenarios. A cop, a former Federal Marshal till a zombie attack, a soldier, a retired special forces officer teaching. From those experiences I have picked the best traits I feel to stay consistent with him. One he's either a cop o a man of the military o both. Two he Lost his family when he was 12 though now he Lost his parents and four siblings. Three he has a trusty German Shepard dog that found him. I have several others I'll mention later on.
If te have something basic like I listed above a cop and his German Sheperd for example o just a teenage boy. te can come up with a past and a since of who they are. Like I'll use my cop. Undercover Detective Edward Dillinger and his dog.
After just a few months of rping him. I now have for character traits and general knowledge that makes him human is.
Edward has a temper and has been known to punch, punzone a person o a bacheca if he gets in a bad enough arguement. Attack him o his dog with words o physically it equals a fight. Due to his ruff childhood and career. Having had Lost his parents and four siblings as well as his best friend/partner. He has PTSD- Post Tramatic Stress Disorder and has been known to drink heavily. His dog being one of the only ones that can calm him down. He's a hero, the type that would take a bullet for a complete stranger and he has bad survivors guilt morphed into the PTSD.
See how much I have there in so little time... Another character I have named Jack Rains all I had was the name and that he was in the 17-18 range. Just after a few hours of rping I established. He's a jokester he loves to wise crack and be sarcastic and pick on his elder friend Boris Chaney. He had a little sister-Lizzy and a mother. He can be a bit clumsy at times and he doesn't always know when to shut up. Also I learned that he's terrified of snakes and was in a coltello fight in high school where he was the only one without a knife.

What can te learn from your characters?

A character I long had established named Fang. I learned even più from. He has a temper but, he'll stand up for what he believes in. He's only had his spirits partially broken in his life time and he payed weapon x back for it in the end. He was born in 1912 and is as of 2013 101 years old though he still looks like he's around 14-16 range. His claws had a rare metal bonded to the bone cells themselves and I've managed to figure out how long it might would take for hm to heal. His memory was erased in the mid to late 60s. He is a chimera. If his wings get wet he sinks and his healing ability functions off of protein. He also has PTSD and is a natural born instigator. Only if te start with him of course unless your a prison guard.

Originally all I had was his name was Fang and he was a mutant born during WWII in a secret government test facility and he went and joined the X-Men years later in the future. Wolverine was his father da DNA. His memory was erased and he had adamantium claws, wings and a healing ability.

Rping helps:

-character development as I stated and explained above
-creating a world. I have this battle academy that went from your basic school that allows weapons to... A school with secret passageways, that exists on a island made up of multiple terrains. That has a gymnasium that can creat any senario.
-research. te can do research as te go and ask others if they know for instance. I had a doctor in the 1850s and a character was drowning. Well CPR hadn't been officially invented yet. I found out about the Sylvester method that was used. My Friends didn't realize it and I taught them something new. Once I had a character that could heal. A friend helped me make it più realistic like it can take between a ora and a week for major injuries but only secondi for scratches and instant for bruises.
-gadgets. te can come up with your character's choice weapon and find how useful it would be to them in a somewhat realistic way. For example in a steampunk one my character uses a Winchester but also a bow and Arrow that folds up. Another example is my character has found during a zombie apocalypse arrows are better than bullets cause it's harder to run out of them and it isn't hard to make them. One of my friend's weapon of choice is a shovel.



There is always something to improve on so why not try rping it's easy and fun and te don't have to do a video game to do it. All te need is a forum thread, an idea, a character and at least one other person to unisciti you. Being a Rper for 2 years now I can say its one of my preferito things and it could easily become your favorite.

I think I'll take some time to explain some basic terms and rules first though before te stop Leggere this article.
First of all ask to unisciti unless it hasn't already started.
Don't spam it till te get an answer sometimes Rpers rp while the one that started it is offline and they will get back to you. Just check often.

-No meta gaming o god modding, which basically means don't over power anything and don't use information that your character would otherwise not know.
-no bunnying o no bunnying without permission, means say te and a person are talking say in Camelot. They aren't online and te want to talk to someone in say Glasgow. te can't say the person went with te unless te got permission from the person.
-no one liners, pretty basic means make your response più than one line and make it descriptive. For example:

Bad idea. Joe walked up to the castle.
Good idea. Joe walked down the winding path to the castle. He looked up at it. The walls were ominous black eroded stone. It looked like a place Dracula would get along well in. Joe swallowed and prayed that Dracula didn't live there.
-OOC, Out of Character, I means like talking person to person versus character to character many use either (()), [],() o some other version of those to explain they are Talking out of character. I prefer (()).
-bump, means moving the thread up in the recents so te don't have to cerca for it. Also it can be used to bring something to mind.
-abide da other thread creators rules
-if there is a character sheet fill it out before te jump in it lets them know about the character your using te usually can modify the sheet and add a field o remove it though the fields in the original sheet generally is required
Ex: Name:
Age:
Personality:
Appearance:
Backstory:
Other:
-Open rp, means anyone can unisciti at anytime
-closed o private rp, can't unisciti o te have to ask to join
-be nice to others and don't take the stuff seriously. Don't get in a fight fight and take it hard o as a personal attack. It's just character to character fighting
-cursing, most prefer little to none
-sex, usually prefer fades to black o going to messenger to do it then return back to the thread
-read the entire first post before joining. Each rp has a different plot and style te may not want to unisciti the first one te click on only ones like the 'Coffee house' are threads where any character can join. I don't always unisciti a rp I look at based on what the first post says. For instance there was one that was one called Camp Half-blood it was Demi-god based and I don't really care much about Demi-gods so I chose not to join.
-join as many as te can handle te need to unisciti enough te can keep up with and still get real life tasks done, sleep's important too
-Reality always comes first
-do your homework. te want a schizophrenic character? Research it. People get offended when te use a movie portrayal.
-don't make your character unbeatable, in other words make them human
-make your responses open ended. For example
Good idea:Fang threw a punch, punzone at Victor.
Bad idea:Fang threw a punch, punzone at Victor breaking his nose.
-NPC, non personal character, means they are just there usually not referred to da name
Ex: the guard walked up to Fang and ordered"move!"
Suspension Of Disbelief: What Storytellers Should Know - Margaret Kerrison via FilmCourage.com.
video
Scrivere
film
Film
filmmaking
entertainment
videogames
autore
5 Tips For Scrivere A TV Pilot - Pamela Douglas via FilmCourage.com.
video
Scrivere
film
Film
filmmaking
tv
Televisione
autore
libri
Good Scrivere Demands Emotional Honesty - Courtney Miller via FilmCourage.com.
video
Scrivere
film
Film
filmmaking
tv
get out
this is us
Televisione
Why 9 Out Of 10 Screenplays End Up In The Trash - Joston Ramon Theney via Filmcourage.com
video
Scrivere
film
Film
tv
Televisione
filmmaking
independent filmmaking
What Is Immersive Storytelling? - Margaret Kerrison via FilmCourage.com.
video
Scrivere
film
Film
tv
theme park
videogames
libri
autore
There Is No Self Help Book For Successful Authors - Andrew Warren via FilmCourage.com.
video
Scrivere
autore
libri
creatives
film
Televisione
tv
Leggere
The Big Mistake Filmmakers Make With Their Characters - John Gray via FilmCourage.com.
video
Scrivere
film
Film
filmmaking
brooklyn
Televisione
tv
Ghost Whisperer - Presenze
What Writers Should Know About TV Scrivere Programs - Niceole R. Levy via FilmCourage.com.
video
Scrivere
film
Film
tv
Televisione
authors
filmmaking
libri
When te Pitch A Movie Don't Tell The Ending - Jeffrey Davis and Peter Desberg via FilmCourage.com.
video
Scrivere
comedy
tv
Televisione
film
Film
filmmaking
authors
Why Professional TV Writers Use 4 Act Structure - Pamela Douglas via FilmCourage.com.
video
Scrivere
film
Film
Televisione
tv
filmmaking
autore
Every Character te Write Needs A Horoscope - P.M. Lipscomb via FilmCourage.com.
video
Scrivere
film
Film
filmmaking
authors
horoscope
zodiac
A Story Is A Hero's Struggle Against An Obstacle To Reach A Goal - Christopher Riley
video
Scrivere
film
Film
autore
libri
Televisione
tv
filmmaking
One Truth No One Can Teach te About Screenwriting - Jesse Harris via FilmCourage.com.
video
Scrivere
film
Film
independent film
filmmaking
tv
Televisione
Biggest Mistakes Writers Make With TV Pilots - Niceole R. Levy via FilmCourage.com.
video
Scrivere
film
Film
filmmaking
screenwriting
Televisione
tv
5 Basic Elements Every Great Story Must Have - Courtney Miller via FilmCourage.com.
video
Scrivere
film
libri
authors
Film
Televisione
tv
filmmaking
First Steps To Scrivere A Story - Sean Reid via FilmCourage.com.
video
Scrivere
card game
games
Film
libri
film
filmmaking
tv
Writers Who Are Scared To Share Their Work - Kelly Edwards via FilmCourage.com.
video
Scrivere
film
Film
filmmaking
libri
authors
creatives
How To Write Great Characters - Guido Segal via FilmCourage.com.
video
Scrivere
film
Film
screenwriting
filmmaking
Televisione
tv
20 Character domande Every Writer Should Know - Christopher Riley via FilmCourage.com.
video
Scrivere
film
Film
filmmaking
authors
libri
Televisione
tv
How To Think Up A Movie Idea Every Two minuti - Christian Elder via FilmCourage.com.
video
Scrivere
Film
authors
film
filmmaking
Televisione
libri
tv