âI fucked that up,â Alex said, as she lay dying.
âThereâs a lot to mess up, to be fair,â Samson said. He was close to death himself, and the horde of angry goblins were probably going to change that soon.
âYouâll be fine,â Hawke insisted. âIâll get over there and put all your organs back inside you in a second.â
âNot if I have anything to say about it,â Kim said. She raised her hand and let her chosen instrument of death fall.
The sapphire blue dice made a small clink as it hit the table.
âDamn it. Nineteen doesnât hit you, does it?â
âYou know it doesnât,â Hawke said. Her flawless memory was the whole reason Kim got to be the perma-DM. She could remember all the arcane rules of Pathfinder that everyone else forgot. It kept the game running smoothly, even if it was running smoothly into the grave for newbies like Alex and Samson.
âFine. The crossbow shot misses. Vell, your turn.â
âOh, okay. I should probably heal Alex, right?â
âYouâre not exactly good at it, Mr. Sorcerer,â Alex said. âBest defense is a good offense. Go blow something up.â
They were playing an intro-level game, so Vell didnât really have many ways to blow anything up. He could set stuff on fire though, and decided to burn up a goblin with a simple cantrip. With the goblin horde now -1, turn order rolled over to Samson.
âAlright, time for me to miss, do nothing, and have to reload anyway,â Samson said. Much to his surprise, Samson actually hit an attack roll for the first time in the session. His make-believe Gunslinger had not been performing to nearly the level of a certain real world gunslinger sitting at the table.
âOne more goblin down, only three to go,â Kim said. As the table rolled around, Hawke revived Alexâs wizard, and it came to Samsonâs turn once again. He glared down at his character sheet, and the gun listed on it.
âHold on, I want to try something,â Samson said. He grabbed his assigned dice and tossed it over to Vell. âRoll my attack for me.â
âReally?â
âItâs science,â Samson said. âLetâs see what happens.â
Vell rolled his eyes and the dice at the same time. The dense copper die thudded on the table and resulted in a natural 20 -a critical hit with the imaginary gun.
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âHmm.â
âThat could be a coincidence,â Kim said. âItâs a five percent chance every time.â
âRoll it again.â
The dice rolled again, and landed on 20 again.
âStatistically unlikely, but not impossible.â
Vell rolled another 20.
âAlright, fuck that, Samson, roll your own attacks,â Kim said. âNone of Vellâs characters are allowed to have guns.â
âUnderstandable,â Vell said. Samson rolled his own attack, managed a hit, and moved the game forward to Alexâs turn.
âI feel like this game has a very questionable understanding of magic,â Alex said, as she examined her empty spell slots. âEven an amateur magician could cause a shockwave more than twice a day.â
âItâs not meant to be a true-to-life depiction of magic combat, Alex. Thereâs goblins in it.â
âThereâs goblins in real life too,â Alex said. Sheâd been stabbed in the leg by one a few months ago.
âMost people donât know that,â Vell said. âItâs just a game. If you need a justification, I donât know, itâs medieval. They were probably just dumber and worse at magic back then.â
âHmm. Logical. Whatâs left of my ego is placated, letâs smash some goblins,â Alex said. It was especially satisfying given the previous stabbing incident. She hurled a cantrip at a far-off goblin and then bashed the other over the head with her staff. Hawke dealt the finish blow with a very large axe. He was playing a strong and fearless barbarian, which he insisted had nothing to do with any feelings of inadequacy regarding his weak and fearful life. It was just fun to hit things with an axe.
âOkay, goblin murderâs done,â Vell said. âNow we have to go back to that village chief guy.â
âBoner lass,â Hawke said with a nod.
âBonnarlius,â Kim corrected.
âLike I said. Boner lass.â
âYouâve done this seventeen times, Hawke,â Kim said, with a digital sigh.
âYeah, and itâs still funny,â Hawke said.
âI donât get it,â Samson grunted.
âThatâs because you donât speak English, itâs probably not translating well,â Alex said. The auto-translate spell struggled with very specific puns. âThe NPCâs name sounds like an English word for erection.â
âOh. That is kind of funny,â Samson said.
âDonât encourage him,â Kim said. âAlright, you guys head back to Boner la- Fuck!â
Kim put her head in her hands to obscure her optical sensors as Hawke did a quick little victory dance.
âOkay. Fine. Are we done?â
âIâm done,â Hawke said.
âAlright, so Bonnarlius,â Kim said, enunciating very clearly. âThanks you for your service and pays you the agreed upon twenty-five gold pieces. He says he is also aware of a den of dangerous wolves in the area, if you are inclined to keep serving the village, or offers you a place to rest if you need it.â
âThis place has got a lot of problems for a village with like eleven people in it,â Samson said.
âYeah, and this Bonnarlius guy is right on top of them all, heâs-â
Vell stopped himself and looked down at the tiny figurine representing his sorceror. His forehead started to wrinkle.
âVell.â
A third wrinkle appeared.
âVell, donât you forehead wrinkle me,â Kim said.
Fourth wrinkle.
âI think Bonnarlius is the bad guy,â Vell said. Kim slammed her fists into the table.
âVell, come on! Save the forehead shit for the supervillains, not my imaginary bullshit villains,â Kim said.
âHe just had a suspicious amount of info on the bad guys,â Vell said. âHe mentioned that weird artifact earlier, things add up!â
âWell congratulations, you figured out the big twist like seven games in advance,â Kim grumbled.
âOh, were we going to do this seven more times?â Alex said. âIâm not sure I have the time.â
âIâm not sure I have the patience,â Samson said. âI donât think this game is my kind of thing.â
âWell, thereâs the real villain of any tabletop campaign,â Vell said. âScheduling.â