Bart Bolt is the only old PC I have multiple versions for in my records. In all my years of gaming he's the single most successful D&D character I've run starting from zero experience points and working my way up. Bart was created for Dave Dalley's 2nd edition AD&D campaign, originally set in his own setting but later we rode Ziggy's Magic Cabinet to Krynn. To this day I'm not sure if that guy was Ziggy from the comic strip or Ziggy Stardust or both or neither. Dave's campaign almost felt like a buddy action movie at times, with Gopher's highborn swashbuckler Sir Ian Wulfric Belvidere III and my ranger/peasant hero playing off each other's foibles. Too bad that dragon killed Sir Ian near the end of the campaign. He was on a quest to win his true love, too.
I'm pretty sure Bart was one of the first characters I typed up on a Word Processor. I have earlier versions that are hand written. Each of these character write-ups goes to about 5 pages, as I took a LOT of notes. One page lists pretty much every NPC Bart had ever met, another is a diary of monsters killed. The latter was standard on my charsheets at the time, because both my regular DMs were concerned about my PCs acting on monster knowledge that they didn't have but that I knew.
Anyway, rather than bore you with 15 pages of a single character, I thought I'd share some doodles I found on various pages.
"Quelch" was a little no-account town that my crew and I fought tooth and nail to save from all sorts of wandering menaces. I didn't realize it at the time, but it was basically our home town in fantasy drag. Notice "no windows" on the floorplan. Classic player paranoia. The stuffed dragonclaw on the mantle came from the black dragon that killed everyone else in the party. In the last round of combat it was me solo against the dragon, both covered with grievous wounds. We tied initiative. I killed it, but it simultaneously knocked me to exactly zero hit points. Only timely intervention by an NPC allowed me to live to claim that draconic trophy.
An attempt to draw a coat of arms for my dude. He wasn't a knight, but I had hopes. Again with the dragon claw. The hand in the bottom right is actually a white glove with a blue gem on the index finger. That's a token from one of Bart's greatest adventures, when we played through Graeme Morris's epic two-parter UK2 The Sentinel and UK3 The Gauntlet. The item in the bottom left is a warhammer with a Kirby Thor-style lanyard.
The Halo Trees of K'Pushia get their name from their strange circular branches covered in white fluff. I think we went on some sort of adventure to get a Halo Stick and two other items for some sort of magic spell. I have the words "Kirchin Vaolup Leaves" and "Stinking Nelfose Roots" written on that same page. I vaguely remember they were all supposed to end up in a fey cauldron or something.
A Calvalcade of Character Sheets, part 1; part 2
Mince Pie Fest 2024: Waitrose No 1
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These often get picked as the best supermarket mince pies by the gutter
press, so let's see. The pastry has a good texture, firm but also soft, but
is mayb...
I spot the Sword of Chaos on that floorplan...
ReplyDeleteI'm partial to the staghorn knives, myself. Time to send in a thief :)
ReplyDeleteCheck out my blog today, Jeff. It´s sorta for you.
ReplyDeleteVery cool. Drawing up your house and filling up the trophy room seems to have become a lost art for rpg characters.
ReplyDeleteI'm pretty impressed that you have been able to play and DM. I've almost always been the DM (I can probably count all the times I've played). Do you think playing has helped your DMing and if so how?
ReplyDeleteAs an aside, my old character in the Bandit Kingdoms, Dr. Phostarius, was originally built to adventure alongside Bart Bolt, and was kitted out from that spare equipment.
ReplyDeleteThus my shout-out for the Sword of Chaos (Since Jeff never used it, it was written up as a Nine-Lives Stealer. After talking to Dave,we found out it just drove you nuts), mine by dint of being a Moorcock fanboy.
It was generating Dr. Phostarius, and the DM subsequently never being heard from again, that led to the Bandit Kingdoms campaign.
So Munge Mungely didn't start from the ground floor, huh? When did he enter the scene?
ReplyDeleteIntruder_W, any chance you could dig up a sheet for Doc Phostarius and throw it up over here? I'd love to see it.
I think I just saw the sheet for my longest running 2e PC recently...maybe i'll scan that one in!
P.S. I just noted that Munge, cleric of Demogorgon, speaks Ixitxachitl. Legit.
Do you think playing has helped your DMing and if so how?
ReplyDeleteIt's all about empathy. For maximum enjoyment, I feel you've got to be able to understand what's happening on the other side of the screen.
So Munge Mungely didn't start from the ground floor, huh? When did he enter the scene?
I don't remember exactly, but he was already maxed out on cleric levels when he entered play. 4/4 at least.
Great stuff. I should start scanning stuff from my shoebox full of ephemeral papers.
ReplyDelete@ cole, at the time all my stuff was printouts from a word processor. I can't dig up an actual sheet to scan, but I dug an old file out of the archives, and formatted it.
ReplyDeleteDr. Phostarius, circa 1998
A short, incoherent write-up is in my backgrounds post:
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@ Intruder_W : Most Excellent. I don't think enough PCs bring their humanoid armies to bear against guys named after old Steely Dan songs anymore.
ReplyDeleteWell, maybe in William Gibson books or something.