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Older Gamers, Older Characters?


BigJackBrass

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I've noticed that many of us here at the Secret Hero HQ are of a certain vintage... the more mature gamer, one might say. Old, frankly, compared to the target market for, say, Exalted. Does this mean that we tend to be playing older characters?

 

Is your idea of a hero now a slightly past-it character, approaching middle age and seeing a new wave of criminals emerge? or can you recall the naivety and enthusiasm you had a couple of decades ago and enjoy playing the fresh-faced new super in town?

 

Generally, I rarely played young characters even when I was one. My most memorable Traveller character was about seventy; and although I've never designed Captain Zimmerframe for Champions there's a terrific Astro City story that often makes me consider it.

 

Perhaps I should be asking a slightly different question, though: Does the age of your character affect the way you play him at all? or are your characters caught in that comicbook zone of agelessness that saw Peter Parker take about thirty years to get through college?

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Re: Older Gamers, Older Characters?

 

I can't make any blanket statements; it depends too much on the campaign. I tend not to play young punks because I prefer characters with lots of skills (and punks haven't had the time to acquire all those skills), but there are clear exceptions to that. I mean, there's the 19-year-old werewolf computer geek with a pathological fear of relationships in the Buffy campaign...

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Re: Older Gamers, Older Characters?

 

The age (as in gameworld age, not how long it's been since I've made the character) of course affects how they're played. The 90-year old wizard will usually act differently than the 15-year old apprentice.

 

I don't think I trend towards older characters as I've aged, as far as I can tell. I made mature characters as a teen, and have teenaged characters now as a 30-something. Age of the character depends more on the concept and campaign than my own age. If I want to play the inexperienced hero coming into their abilities, they'll be younger. If I want to play the old warhorse, they'll be older. (shrug)

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Re: Older Gamers, Older Characters?

 

The age (as in gameworld age' date=' not how long it's been since I've made the character) of course affects how they're played. The 90-year old wizard will usually act differently than the 15-year old apprentice.[/quote']

 

Sadly, I've been in a few games where that hasn't been the case (and one superb Chivalry & Sorcery campaign where the wizard was over a hundred and never let anyone forget it, but in very subtle ways. Wonderful stuff) even when it should have been.

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Re: Older Gamers, Older Characters?

 

As to character age, I typically GM, so character age is typically what fits the character concept (usually villains, so it's all over the board).

 

My players are all upper-30s / lower-40s age-wise, and their characters are typically in the low- to mid-20s. I never thought much about it, but in retrospect that does seem odd.

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Re: Older Gamers, Older Characters?

 

In my current (Fantasy) game, all the players are playing teens/early-twenties characters (we as players range from our late twenties to our mid fourties). I described one of the villains as "An old woman. Probably thirty-five or thirty-eight," which had all my players rolling in the aisles. :rofl:

 

I personally have played characters ranging from 16 to 80, and everything inbetween. I think I generally stick with characters in their 20s -- that seems like prime adventuring age: Old enough to know better, but too young to care. ;)

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Re: Older Gamers, Older Characters?

 

Well' date=' it took me about 15 years to graduate from college. Does that mean this "life" thing is all one big comic book?[/quote']

 

Nineteen years for me. And how did I celebrate? By going to graduate school.....

 

Strangely enough, of the characters I'm currently playing, one of them is in his mid-to-late 30's. He's an archaeology professor in a mystic campaign. All the rest are in their late teens or early 20's. Ish.

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Re: Older Gamers, Older Characters?

 

I haven't PLAYED in 25 years but my players who have stuck with me don't seem to have changed the age of their characters. There is a great span of ages in their PCs. My wife still loves playing both supernormally ancient characters and ones just starting out for example. She does especially like playing daughters of her other characters or infamous NPCs

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Re: Older Gamers, Older Characters?

 

"Yes and no".

 

The first RPG I ever played was Traveller, where there were lots of good reasons for playing older characters. In fact, it wasn't technically possible to play characters that were my age at the time! The youngest possible character was 22, and I was 16. I still play Traveller. These days my ideal character would be about my age, but because of Traveller's random chargen that might not happen.

 

On the other hand, I am in a Teen Champions game at the moment (although it seems to be in hibernation). My character is 16.

 

So when I started I was playing characters that are about my present age, and now I play characters that are my age when I started roleplaying... Hmm...

 

But before I get too caught up with that train of thought, I will also play characters of other ages as well. In fact, if there was ever a completely open "play your own Mary Sue" game, I would probably end up with a character who is a bit of a veteran, probably about my present age, although with retarded aging to make him a bit more likely to go jumping around rooftops.

 

So the answer is actually yes, if I was building a pure self-indulgent self-identification character, I would play an older character. In other games, not necessarily.

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Re: Older Gamers, Older Characters?

 

Crossfire started age 30, now 55

Titan Mk III now Mk XI started age 30, now N/A

Badger now called Bearcat started age [i have no idea] looked 30 still looks 30, played for 25+

PAX started age 35, now 45

 

The Chairman started age 32, game ended

The Traveler started age 20 now 10,000+, looks mid-30

 

Electric Blue real age 2, appears 18 [android made flesh]

Flame starting age 14, now 18

Snow Fall starting age 14, now 18

Ca'Rom Holt started age 20, now 24

Kameron N'Kadie started age 30, now 32

Keslan Zane starting age 19, now 21

 

Si Mon Re: The Aquarian started age 68 [looked 30], now 70 [looks 30]

Gi Mon Re: Oceanking started age 40 [looks 25], now 40

 

Dr John Raven starting age 40

Dr Samantha Raven starting age 38

Catherine Raven starting age 16

John Raven Jr starting age 14

Fast Track starting age 13

Raging Bull starting age 13

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Re: Older Gamers, Older Characters?

 

When I first started playing RPGs (back around 1980 or so) I usually played characters close to my own age 16-20. Now that I have gotten older my characters generally have too but not too old. I am now 44 and my characters are generally range in age between 23-28. There are rare exceptions but I don't recall ever having a character older than about 30. I think I have played one as young as 15.

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Re: Older Gamers, Older Characters?

 

These are all going to be ranges. In some cases, there was no set age/calendar, in others, the span of play covered many years.

 

Galen Stormcaster (Wizard) - 25 (long gap) 80's

Hollister Hamlin (Bard and Herald) - late 20's

Kurtak (Barbarian warchief) - Late 30's

Nocturna (Post-apoc. Goth chick) - 16 (I think. The campaign was a rite of passage)

Antioch Bellisarius (Fantasy Assassin) - Early 20's

Yuuki (robot) - 150ish

Ezili LaCroix (Vapor) - early 20's

Llewelyn Harlech (Hogwarts, first year) - 11

John Kingsbridge (actor) - late 30's

 

It seems that where age was not dictated by the campaign (ex: Hogwarts), I have preferred 20s-30s. Younger than that and they tend to lack skills, older than that and I wonder why they are out adventuring instead of settling down.

 

I do seem to remember playing teenagers mostly when I actually was a teenager.

 

Keith "Older than most of my characters" Curtis

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Re: Older Gamers, Older Characters?

 

It varies by game for me, for the most part ... in general, my characters tend to be in their mid-30s to early 40s, as I play a lot of scientists (frequently with too MANY points in sciences), so being a bit older than usual is simply logical. A moderate number of my characters simply don't have aging as an issue ... immortal, or robots, for example.

 

Teen Champions, of course, throws this out of whack.

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Re: Older Gamers, Older Characters?

 

I think I tend towards the youngest adult age that will support whatever amount of backstory I want the character to have. With supers especially, I usually prefer the "new to his powers" guy to the experienced one. It's mainly so I can explore his powers along with him, but it's probably also about my not taking this whole aging thing very well, and wish fulfillment. Of course when GMing I get to play all over the map.

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Re: Older Gamers, Older Characters?

 

My characters have ranged in age from 16 to "I was watching when God grabbed a handful of dust and made Adam." With my age at the time having no bearing on the age of the character. It just depends on what is needed for the character and/or what I feel like playing. I started playing when I was 13, am 35 now, and 90% of my characters throughout have been mid-20s to early-30s.

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Re: Older Gamers, Older Characters?

 

I haven't noticed any tendency in my gaming group to play older characters as we've gotten older.

 

For myself, I tend to pick an age that makes sense in the setting.

 

An exception to this is my current Champs character, Cougar. Partly it makes sense that he's college-aged. Partly it's just because he was the first Champs character I ever designed and was never happy with the initial incarnation (back when I was in college). When I decided to bring him back, I wanted to play the character I wanted to play back then, but couldn't because of my lack of finesse with the system. Thus, he stayed college-aged.

 

In the Privateer game I'm playing in, the setting and backstory seemed to call for a guy who was in his mid-20s or so.

 

Whereas my Over the Edge character is a millennias-old faerie.

 

I do think most games tend to nudge players towards younger characters in subtle ways -- seems a little strange to be playing a time-worn veteran who, when you come right down to it, is no more effective than the fresh-faced newbie of the group.

 

Paul

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