It depends on what the group is playing. If the character is thematically appropriate for that campaign, and you have (have had) fun playing them, go ahead. Re-use, re-cycle 😉 Even if you only ever make one character and play them in every game you join, it’s not rude, if the character ‘fits’.
Do you reuse DND characters?
The consensus was yes you can bring a character over provided it is similar level.
How do you derail a DND campaign?
Still, here are five possible ways you can screw over your DM in a way that makes the whole campaign more awesome.
- Drink with the Big Bad.
- Cause a Riot.
- Kill Someone Important (Or Take Him Hostage)
- Start a War.
- Open Up a Bussiness.
What stunt did your D&D players pull that completely derailed the campaign?
We played “The Dark Eye”, a low magic setting in the classic fantasy world. There was your traditional knight, a goblin sorcerer and a cleric of a thief god. They really wanted a magic item, even though I said that they do not fit to the campaign we were playing.
Can there be 2 dungeon masters?
It is possible for two people to co-DM, whether that be a thing they do at the same time, or achieve by taking turns as the active DM for a session while the other plays a PC (which could also be shared, if desired).
When did migrating characters become more common in D & D?
Migrating characters used to be a more common practice in The Old Days of D&D. Very long format campaigns with varied levels of characters (dying usually put you back at level 1) were the norm in the 1e/2e days and therefore you would get people wanting to bring in characters.
Is it common for D and D characters to be?
In fact, in a way the D&D Living and then the modern Organized Play/Pathfinder Society organizations basically let you port your growing character from game table to game table per session by adding a little bit of extra change tracking and regulation. But in home campaigns, the desire to import characters has shrunk significantly.
Can a DM allow you to multiclass a character?
Some DMs do not allow multiclassing, and that’s their prerogative. Be sure to check with them before making a multiclassed character. Many DMs, including ourselves, are happy to allow multiclassing where a character has shown a compelling reason for it, and discourage it when it is simply done for mechanical purposes.
Can a DM control more than one NPC?
NPCs can be enemies or allies, regular folk or named monsters. However, new DMs who want a DM-PC are usually just unfamiliar with the concept playing the game without controlling a character. What you need to realise as a DM is that you already get to control multiple characters: every NPC in your campaign.