Slaying the Innocents

Posted by Mark on Jan 21, 2010 in 4e D&D, Actual Play, Fluff/Inspiration |
Number of Views :645

Most gamers know the tale of Eric and the Dread Gazebo. It’s been reprinted in the pages of Dragon magazine, retold by multiple geek comics (most notably Knights of the Dinner Table), and often told as a “this happened to my friend” story. For those who still don’t know what I’m talking about, you can click here.

I’ll wait while you read it.

Ready? Good.

I had a very similar situation happen about a year ago in my group.

The guilty party

We were running our way through Thunderspire Labyrinth. The heroes were about halfway through the overall adventure, as I recall, and had been stabbing, smashing and fireballing their way through a hobgoblin fortress deep below the earth in search of captured slaves missing from the nearby towns around Thunderspire.

Now, Bryan was playing as two characters, a brother and sister dwarf pair. The brother was a paladin, his sister a cleric. He was pretty good at it too. They were devout in their faith to Moradin, and were always there for the party when needed (even if the cleric spent a little too much time healing the paladin and not enough healing the rest of the party).

The group came upon a door, and heard voices on the other side. The dwarves took point, kicking in the door and charging in. The room was a kitchen, and two humans in ragged clothing looked up very pathetically. For a moment, there was a flash of hope on their faces.

Then the dwarves struck them down, killing them.

The rest of the group was outraged.

“What are you doing?!” asked Bridget.

“Did you just do what I think you did?” chuckled Dave.

“Good job, man,” said the (questionably chaotic evil) Dale.

I simply sat there with a confused look on my face.

Bryan was confused. “They only had one hit point? They’re minions?”

“Yes, they’re minions,” I said, incredulously. “They were innocent civilians, slaves to the hobgoblins. And you just killed them in cold blood.”

Now, apparently, Bryan hadn’t heard me mention that they looked sad and pathetic, and assumed they were evildoers, if they were in the Hobgoblin stronghold. Perhaps he assumed the slaves would all be down in prison cells or something.

Whatever the case, we allowed him to recant his previous action so he didn’t kill those poor people.

But he never lived it down.

I was reminded of this last night when one of our players mentioned the situation, and we all turned to Bryan and got a good laugh out of it.

“I thought they were the bad guys,” he muttered, under his breath.

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2 Comments

My Favorite Players | Dice Monkey
Feb 19, 2010 at 9:06 am

[...] as I have, and his variety of characters has impressed me. A Bothan Jedi, Cathar smuggler captain, a pair of paladin and cleric dwarves, a pirate, and now your run-of-the-mill human fighter, he’s played them all. He often comes [...]


 

[...] Slaying the Innocents (dicemonkey.net) [...]


 

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