Are there any rules on how characters go from 0th to 1st level in a class?Are there rules for creating level 0 characters?Do you “gain” your 1st level?Are characters limited to 20th level in 5e?Are there any rules that specify a class' alignment?Are there any official adventures that are supposed to end on level 20?How are experience points given to back-up characters?Are there any rules for damage from an explosion?Are there rules for creating level 0 characters?Are there any rules on allowing players to swap out characters of equal level?Is there a mathematical formula to determine how much XP is needed per level?In Out of the Abyss, characters are supposed to be level 15 by the last chapter; how can I get them there via milestone levelling?
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Are there any rules on how characters go from 0th to 1st level in a class?
Are there rules for creating level 0 characters?Do you “gain” your 1st level?Are characters limited to 20th level in 5e?Are there any rules that specify a class' alignment?Are there any official adventures that are supposed to end on level 20?How are experience points given to back-up characters?Are there any rules for damage from an explosion?Are there rules for creating level 0 characters?Are there any rules on allowing players to swap out characters of equal level?Is there a mathematical formula to determine how much XP is needed per level?In Out of the Abyss, characters are supposed to be level 15 by the last chapter; how can I get them there via milestone levelling?
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$begingroup$
One group I played with some years ago, back in 2nd edition, had, as part of their character generation/background process, an explanation of what event caused that character to gain the experience points that pushed them from 0th level to 1st level.
For example the Ranger I played in that campaign was a country farmhand who grabbed an axe and successfully killed a couple of desperate goblin raiders who came to plunder the fields.
I really liked this idea, and am mulling using it again in a 5e campaign I've got planned for the autumn. But I wondered whether there was any official rules material to give rigour to this process.
So: is there anything in 5e rules and supplements that describes the process by which an ordinary 0th level person becomes a 1st level anything?
(This was inspired by this question, which I thought was asking the same thing)
dnd-5e character-advancement character-levels
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
One group I played with some years ago, back in 2nd edition, had, as part of their character generation/background process, an explanation of what event caused that character to gain the experience points that pushed them from 0th level to 1st level.
For example the Ranger I played in that campaign was a country farmhand who grabbed an axe and successfully killed a couple of desperate goblin raiders who came to plunder the fields.
I really liked this idea, and am mulling using it again in a 5e campaign I've got planned for the autumn. But I wondered whether there was any official rules material to give rigour to this process.
So: is there anything in 5e rules and supplements that describes the process by which an ordinary 0th level person becomes a 1st level anything?
(This was inspired by this question, which I thought was asking the same thing)
dnd-5e character-advancement character-levels
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
Related: Are there rules for creating level 0 characters?
$endgroup$
– MikeQ
Aug 15 at 8:56
$begingroup$
Could you clarify what exactly you mean by "0th level"?
$endgroup$
– V2Blast♦
Aug 15 at 9:06
$begingroup$
@V2Blast It's a term from earlier editions indicating an NPC without a class or level - an ordinary peasant or commoner, in other words. I thought it was still common parlance in 5e but perhaps I'm wrong.
$endgroup$
– Matt Thrower
Aug 15 at 9:08
$begingroup$
Could you clarify what you mean by "official ruling"?
$endgroup$
– Mark Wells
Aug 16 at 17:46
$begingroup$
@MarkWells: Judging from the body of the question, they're just asking whether any such official rules exist in 5e. I've edited the title accordingly.
$endgroup$
– V2Blast♦
Aug 17 at 1:39
add a comment |
$begingroup$
One group I played with some years ago, back in 2nd edition, had, as part of their character generation/background process, an explanation of what event caused that character to gain the experience points that pushed them from 0th level to 1st level.
For example the Ranger I played in that campaign was a country farmhand who grabbed an axe and successfully killed a couple of desperate goblin raiders who came to plunder the fields.
I really liked this idea, and am mulling using it again in a 5e campaign I've got planned for the autumn. But I wondered whether there was any official rules material to give rigour to this process.
So: is there anything in 5e rules and supplements that describes the process by which an ordinary 0th level person becomes a 1st level anything?
(This was inspired by this question, which I thought was asking the same thing)
dnd-5e character-advancement character-levels
$endgroup$
One group I played with some years ago, back in 2nd edition, had, as part of their character generation/background process, an explanation of what event caused that character to gain the experience points that pushed them from 0th level to 1st level.
For example the Ranger I played in that campaign was a country farmhand who grabbed an axe and successfully killed a couple of desperate goblin raiders who came to plunder the fields.
I really liked this idea, and am mulling using it again in a 5e campaign I've got planned for the autumn. But I wondered whether there was any official rules material to give rigour to this process.
So: is there anything in 5e rules and supplements that describes the process by which an ordinary 0th level person becomes a 1st level anything?
(This was inspired by this question, which I thought was asking the same thing)
dnd-5e character-advancement character-levels
dnd-5e character-advancement character-levels
edited Aug 17 at 1:38
V2Blast♦
34k5 gold badges123 silver badges212 bronze badges
34k5 gold badges123 silver badges212 bronze badges
asked Aug 15 at 8:54
Matt ThrowerMatt Thrower
2,3712 gold badges19 silver badges34 bronze badges
2,3712 gold badges19 silver badges34 bronze badges
$begingroup$
Related: Are there rules for creating level 0 characters?
$endgroup$
– MikeQ
Aug 15 at 8:56
$begingroup$
Could you clarify what exactly you mean by "0th level"?
$endgroup$
– V2Blast♦
Aug 15 at 9:06
$begingroup$
@V2Blast It's a term from earlier editions indicating an NPC without a class or level - an ordinary peasant or commoner, in other words. I thought it was still common parlance in 5e but perhaps I'm wrong.
$endgroup$
– Matt Thrower
Aug 15 at 9:08
$begingroup$
Could you clarify what you mean by "official ruling"?
$endgroup$
– Mark Wells
Aug 16 at 17:46
$begingroup$
@MarkWells: Judging from the body of the question, they're just asking whether any such official rules exist in 5e. I've edited the title accordingly.
$endgroup$
– V2Blast♦
Aug 17 at 1:39
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Related: Are there rules for creating level 0 characters?
$endgroup$
– MikeQ
Aug 15 at 8:56
$begingroup$
Could you clarify what exactly you mean by "0th level"?
$endgroup$
– V2Blast♦
Aug 15 at 9:06
$begingroup$
@V2Blast It's a term from earlier editions indicating an NPC without a class or level - an ordinary peasant or commoner, in other words. I thought it was still common parlance in 5e but perhaps I'm wrong.
$endgroup$
– Matt Thrower
Aug 15 at 9:08
$begingroup$
Could you clarify what you mean by "official ruling"?
$endgroup$
– Mark Wells
Aug 16 at 17:46
$begingroup$
@MarkWells: Judging from the body of the question, they're just asking whether any such official rules exist in 5e. I've edited the title accordingly.
$endgroup$
– V2Blast♦
Aug 17 at 1:39
$begingroup$
Related: Are there rules for creating level 0 characters?
$endgroup$
– MikeQ
Aug 15 at 8:56
$begingroup$
Related: Are there rules for creating level 0 characters?
$endgroup$
– MikeQ
Aug 15 at 8:56
$begingroup$
Could you clarify what exactly you mean by "0th level"?
$endgroup$
– V2Blast♦
Aug 15 at 9:06
$begingroup$
Could you clarify what exactly you mean by "0th level"?
$endgroup$
– V2Blast♦
Aug 15 at 9:06
$begingroup$
@V2Blast It's a term from earlier editions indicating an NPC without a class or level - an ordinary peasant or commoner, in other words. I thought it was still common parlance in 5e but perhaps I'm wrong.
$endgroup$
– Matt Thrower
Aug 15 at 9:08
$begingroup$
@V2Blast It's a term from earlier editions indicating an NPC without a class or level - an ordinary peasant or commoner, in other words. I thought it was still common parlance in 5e but perhaps I'm wrong.
$endgroup$
– Matt Thrower
Aug 15 at 9:08
$begingroup$
Could you clarify what you mean by "official ruling"?
$endgroup$
– Mark Wells
Aug 16 at 17:46
$begingroup$
Could you clarify what you mean by "official ruling"?
$endgroup$
– Mark Wells
Aug 16 at 17:46
$begingroup$
@MarkWells: Judging from the body of the question, they're just asking whether any such official rules exist in 5e. I've edited the title accordingly.
$endgroup$
– V2Blast♦
Aug 17 at 1:39
$begingroup$
@MarkWells: Judging from the body of the question, they're just asking whether any such official rules exist in 5e. I've edited the title accordingly.
$endgroup$
– V2Blast♦
Aug 17 at 1:39
add a comment |
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
$begingroup$
There is no 0th level
D&D 5e expects players to start at level 1. NPCs don't have player class levels, so there's never such a thing as a 0th level character. A NPC fighter doesn't actually have fighter levels, he just has a stat block that incorparates some fighter skills into it.
Because there is no such thing as a 0th level character, there are no rules on how characters gained their first level, because that's how they started the game. How you wish to fluff your character becoming a ranger however is up to you. It might be related to the background you've picked, but it might not be. "I used to be a merchant, but now I'm a fighter because I defended my town from goblins" is a perfectly valid explanation. The rules don't care either way, they just care that you've made a level 1 character.
$endgroup$
2
$begingroup$
One could argue that there are no NPC in 5e. Only PC and monster. PC have character sheets, monsters have statistic blocks. Some monsters have human (or other PC-able race) as their race but the similarities end there.
$endgroup$
– Mindwin
Aug 16 at 12:21
4
$begingroup$
@Mindwin, monsters (unless played by players) are NPCs, and PCs do have stat blocks (often, but not always in the format of a character sheet). The distinction between PC & NPC lies solely in who controls the actions of that character. The distinction between 'stat block' and 'character sheet' likes solely in the format and layout of the information.
$endgroup$
– Theo Brinkman
Aug 16 at 18:21
add a comment |
$begingroup$
That would most likely be covered by your background. You might be a fighter because you used to be a guard or a gladiator. You might be a druid because you used to be a hermit. You might be a cleric because you used to be an acolyte.
As part of the character generation process you are generally expected to come up with a backstory featuring the background of your character and how they became who they now are.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
No official books have guidance for "level 0" characters
The Player's Handbook assumes that when create a character at its lowest level, you begin at first level. How you effectively got your first level depends on your Background and the story you created for it. The rules offer many ways on how to flesh a story before the adventure, but none of it encompasses the "0th to 1st level step" in a mechanical sense.
However, an Adventurer's League module has guidance for it
The DDAL-ELW00 - What's Past is Prologue module written for the Embers of the Last War storyline has some guidelines for it, including the following:
A level 0 character has 6 + their Constitution modifier for hit points, 1d6 hit die, and no proficiency bonus. Weapon and armor proficiencies may be granted by race and background; those are fine!
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
As mentioned in other answers, the background would cover this. To play it through though, here is an example of how my DM in one campaign handled it.
They had us write up our backstories and then give it to them ahead of time. Then one-on-one would role play specific events in our backstory. All rolls where done using a straight d20 with no modifiers to signify an average person, prior to their adventuring of developing different skills. That also means you don't really need a character sheet at this point and could leave things like your class more open ended.
An example would be that I wrote that my character was left for dead after defending their sibling from an attack that ultimately killed the sibling. In role playing it however, my character managed to stand their ground for longer than I had envisioned before being taken down but upon recovering rolled so poorly was unable to determine what became of the sibling. Now, there is a chance of finding out the fate of the sibling whereas the story I wrote had already determined their fate, turning that part of the story from one of revenge to one of looking for answers.
Now having said that, you would want to have good trust and communication between DM and players to do this since events could unfold differently but everyone in my group seemed to really enjoy how our characters developed by doing it this way.
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add a comment |
$begingroup$
If you care to look to an alternate system for inspiration, Dungeon Crawl Classics has a new character option that I think was called a character funnel. You essentially generated a bunch of level 0 peasants (there were numerous tables to randomly determine the peasants background), then had them get caught up in a significant event, and those that survived gained level 1 and turned into PCs.
The one time I participated in such a game ended up being a lot of fun. Each player started with 5 peasants of various occupations, then our village was raided, and in the course of the ensuing battle most of our peasants died. I think we ended up averaging about 2 survivors per player, from which we picked our PCs and determined our classes. For me, having the characters background and transition to an adventurer be played at the table greatly influenced how I evolved them as a character.
I have often thought about adapting this process to DnD, but I have never sat down an worked it out.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
I love the idea, it might be something I will adopt.
$endgroup$
– Helena
Aug 17 at 10:54
add a comment |
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5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
$begingroup$
There is no 0th level
D&D 5e expects players to start at level 1. NPCs don't have player class levels, so there's never such a thing as a 0th level character. A NPC fighter doesn't actually have fighter levels, he just has a stat block that incorparates some fighter skills into it.
Because there is no such thing as a 0th level character, there are no rules on how characters gained their first level, because that's how they started the game. How you wish to fluff your character becoming a ranger however is up to you. It might be related to the background you've picked, but it might not be. "I used to be a merchant, but now I'm a fighter because I defended my town from goblins" is a perfectly valid explanation. The rules don't care either way, they just care that you've made a level 1 character.
$endgroup$
2
$begingroup$
One could argue that there are no NPC in 5e. Only PC and monster. PC have character sheets, monsters have statistic blocks. Some monsters have human (or other PC-able race) as their race but the similarities end there.
$endgroup$
– Mindwin
Aug 16 at 12:21
4
$begingroup$
@Mindwin, monsters (unless played by players) are NPCs, and PCs do have stat blocks (often, but not always in the format of a character sheet). The distinction between PC & NPC lies solely in who controls the actions of that character. The distinction between 'stat block' and 'character sheet' likes solely in the format and layout of the information.
$endgroup$
– Theo Brinkman
Aug 16 at 18:21
add a comment |
$begingroup$
There is no 0th level
D&D 5e expects players to start at level 1. NPCs don't have player class levels, so there's never such a thing as a 0th level character. A NPC fighter doesn't actually have fighter levels, he just has a stat block that incorparates some fighter skills into it.
Because there is no such thing as a 0th level character, there are no rules on how characters gained their first level, because that's how they started the game. How you wish to fluff your character becoming a ranger however is up to you. It might be related to the background you've picked, but it might not be. "I used to be a merchant, but now I'm a fighter because I defended my town from goblins" is a perfectly valid explanation. The rules don't care either way, they just care that you've made a level 1 character.
$endgroup$
2
$begingroup$
One could argue that there are no NPC in 5e. Only PC and monster. PC have character sheets, monsters have statistic blocks. Some monsters have human (or other PC-able race) as their race but the similarities end there.
$endgroup$
– Mindwin
Aug 16 at 12:21
4
$begingroup$
@Mindwin, monsters (unless played by players) are NPCs, and PCs do have stat blocks (often, but not always in the format of a character sheet). The distinction between PC & NPC lies solely in who controls the actions of that character. The distinction between 'stat block' and 'character sheet' likes solely in the format and layout of the information.
$endgroup$
– Theo Brinkman
Aug 16 at 18:21
add a comment |
$begingroup$
There is no 0th level
D&D 5e expects players to start at level 1. NPCs don't have player class levels, so there's never such a thing as a 0th level character. A NPC fighter doesn't actually have fighter levels, he just has a stat block that incorparates some fighter skills into it.
Because there is no such thing as a 0th level character, there are no rules on how characters gained their first level, because that's how they started the game. How you wish to fluff your character becoming a ranger however is up to you. It might be related to the background you've picked, but it might not be. "I used to be a merchant, but now I'm a fighter because I defended my town from goblins" is a perfectly valid explanation. The rules don't care either way, they just care that you've made a level 1 character.
$endgroup$
There is no 0th level
D&D 5e expects players to start at level 1. NPCs don't have player class levels, so there's never such a thing as a 0th level character. A NPC fighter doesn't actually have fighter levels, he just has a stat block that incorparates some fighter skills into it.
Because there is no such thing as a 0th level character, there are no rules on how characters gained their first level, because that's how they started the game. How you wish to fluff your character becoming a ranger however is up to you. It might be related to the background you've picked, but it might not be. "I used to be a merchant, but now I'm a fighter because I defended my town from goblins" is a perfectly valid explanation. The rules don't care either way, they just care that you've made a level 1 character.
edited Aug 15 at 9:25
answered Aug 15 at 9:10
TheikTheik
19.8k82 silver badges106 bronze badges
19.8k82 silver badges106 bronze badges
2
$begingroup$
One could argue that there are no NPC in 5e. Only PC and monster. PC have character sheets, monsters have statistic blocks. Some monsters have human (or other PC-able race) as their race but the similarities end there.
$endgroup$
– Mindwin
Aug 16 at 12:21
4
$begingroup$
@Mindwin, monsters (unless played by players) are NPCs, and PCs do have stat blocks (often, but not always in the format of a character sheet). The distinction between PC & NPC lies solely in who controls the actions of that character. The distinction between 'stat block' and 'character sheet' likes solely in the format and layout of the information.
$endgroup$
– Theo Brinkman
Aug 16 at 18:21
add a comment |
2
$begingroup$
One could argue that there are no NPC in 5e. Only PC and monster. PC have character sheets, monsters have statistic blocks. Some monsters have human (or other PC-able race) as their race but the similarities end there.
$endgroup$
– Mindwin
Aug 16 at 12:21
4
$begingroup$
@Mindwin, monsters (unless played by players) are NPCs, and PCs do have stat blocks (often, but not always in the format of a character sheet). The distinction between PC & NPC lies solely in who controls the actions of that character. The distinction between 'stat block' and 'character sheet' likes solely in the format and layout of the information.
$endgroup$
– Theo Brinkman
Aug 16 at 18:21
2
2
$begingroup$
One could argue that there are no NPC in 5e. Only PC and monster. PC have character sheets, monsters have statistic blocks. Some monsters have human (or other PC-able race) as their race but the similarities end there.
$endgroup$
– Mindwin
Aug 16 at 12:21
$begingroup$
One could argue that there are no NPC in 5e. Only PC and monster. PC have character sheets, monsters have statistic blocks. Some monsters have human (or other PC-able race) as their race but the similarities end there.
$endgroup$
– Mindwin
Aug 16 at 12:21
4
4
$begingroup$
@Mindwin, monsters (unless played by players) are NPCs, and PCs do have stat blocks (often, but not always in the format of a character sheet). The distinction between PC & NPC lies solely in who controls the actions of that character. The distinction between 'stat block' and 'character sheet' likes solely in the format and layout of the information.
$endgroup$
– Theo Brinkman
Aug 16 at 18:21
$begingroup$
@Mindwin, monsters (unless played by players) are NPCs, and PCs do have stat blocks (often, but not always in the format of a character sheet). The distinction between PC & NPC lies solely in who controls the actions of that character. The distinction between 'stat block' and 'character sheet' likes solely in the format and layout of the information.
$endgroup$
– Theo Brinkman
Aug 16 at 18:21
add a comment |
$begingroup$
That would most likely be covered by your background. You might be a fighter because you used to be a guard or a gladiator. You might be a druid because you used to be a hermit. You might be a cleric because you used to be an acolyte.
As part of the character generation process you are generally expected to come up with a backstory featuring the background of your character and how they became who they now are.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
That would most likely be covered by your background. You might be a fighter because you used to be a guard or a gladiator. You might be a druid because you used to be a hermit. You might be a cleric because you used to be an acolyte.
As part of the character generation process you are generally expected to come up with a backstory featuring the background of your character and how they became who they now are.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
That would most likely be covered by your background. You might be a fighter because you used to be a guard or a gladiator. You might be a druid because you used to be a hermit. You might be a cleric because you used to be an acolyte.
As part of the character generation process you are generally expected to come up with a backstory featuring the background of your character and how they became who they now are.
$endgroup$
That would most likely be covered by your background. You might be a fighter because you used to be a guard or a gladiator. You might be a druid because you used to be a hermit. You might be a cleric because you used to be an acolyte.
As part of the character generation process you are generally expected to come up with a backstory featuring the background of your character and how they became who they now are.
answered Aug 15 at 9:12
Allan MillsAllan Mills
5,7391 gold badge8 silver badges42 bronze badges
5,7391 gold badge8 silver badges42 bronze badges
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
No official books have guidance for "level 0" characters
The Player's Handbook assumes that when create a character at its lowest level, you begin at first level. How you effectively got your first level depends on your Background and the story you created for it. The rules offer many ways on how to flesh a story before the adventure, but none of it encompasses the "0th to 1st level step" in a mechanical sense.
However, an Adventurer's League module has guidance for it
The DDAL-ELW00 - What's Past is Prologue module written for the Embers of the Last War storyline has some guidelines for it, including the following:
A level 0 character has 6 + their Constitution modifier for hit points, 1d6 hit die, and no proficiency bonus. Weapon and armor proficiencies may be granted by race and background; those are fine!
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
No official books have guidance for "level 0" characters
The Player's Handbook assumes that when create a character at its lowest level, you begin at first level. How you effectively got your first level depends on your Background and the story you created for it. The rules offer many ways on how to flesh a story before the adventure, but none of it encompasses the "0th to 1st level step" in a mechanical sense.
However, an Adventurer's League module has guidance for it
The DDAL-ELW00 - What's Past is Prologue module written for the Embers of the Last War storyline has some guidelines for it, including the following:
A level 0 character has 6 + their Constitution modifier for hit points, 1d6 hit die, and no proficiency bonus. Weapon and armor proficiencies may be granted by race and background; those are fine!
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
No official books have guidance for "level 0" characters
The Player's Handbook assumes that when create a character at its lowest level, you begin at first level. How you effectively got your first level depends on your Background and the story you created for it. The rules offer many ways on how to flesh a story before the adventure, but none of it encompasses the "0th to 1st level step" in a mechanical sense.
However, an Adventurer's League module has guidance for it
The DDAL-ELW00 - What's Past is Prologue module written for the Embers of the Last War storyline has some guidelines for it, including the following:
A level 0 character has 6 + their Constitution modifier for hit points, 1d6 hit die, and no proficiency bonus. Weapon and armor proficiencies may be granted by race and background; those are fine!
$endgroup$
No official books have guidance for "level 0" characters
The Player's Handbook assumes that when create a character at its lowest level, you begin at first level. How you effectively got your first level depends on your Background and the story you created for it. The rules offer many ways on how to flesh a story before the adventure, but none of it encompasses the "0th to 1st level step" in a mechanical sense.
However, an Adventurer's League module has guidance for it
The DDAL-ELW00 - What's Past is Prologue module written for the Embers of the Last War storyline has some guidelines for it, including the following:
A level 0 character has 6 + their Constitution modifier for hit points, 1d6 hit die, and no proficiency bonus. Weapon and armor proficiencies may be granted by race and background; those are fine!
answered Aug 17 at 1:26
KuertenKuerten
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3,6052 gold badges14 silver badges51 bronze badges
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$begingroup$
As mentioned in other answers, the background would cover this. To play it through though, here is an example of how my DM in one campaign handled it.
They had us write up our backstories and then give it to them ahead of time. Then one-on-one would role play specific events in our backstory. All rolls where done using a straight d20 with no modifiers to signify an average person, prior to their adventuring of developing different skills. That also means you don't really need a character sheet at this point and could leave things like your class more open ended.
An example would be that I wrote that my character was left for dead after defending their sibling from an attack that ultimately killed the sibling. In role playing it however, my character managed to stand their ground for longer than I had envisioned before being taken down but upon recovering rolled so poorly was unable to determine what became of the sibling. Now, there is a chance of finding out the fate of the sibling whereas the story I wrote had already determined their fate, turning that part of the story from one of revenge to one of looking for answers.
Now having said that, you would want to have good trust and communication between DM and players to do this since events could unfold differently but everyone in my group seemed to really enjoy how our characters developed by doing it this way.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
As mentioned in other answers, the background would cover this. To play it through though, here is an example of how my DM in one campaign handled it.
They had us write up our backstories and then give it to them ahead of time. Then one-on-one would role play specific events in our backstory. All rolls where done using a straight d20 with no modifiers to signify an average person, prior to their adventuring of developing different skills. That also means you don't really need a character sheet at this point and could leave things like your class more open ended.
An example would be that I wrote that my character was left for dead after defending their sibling from an attack that ultimately killed the sibling. In role playing it however, my character managed to stand their ground for longer than I had envisioned before being taken down but upon recovering rolled so poorly was unable to determine what became of the sibling. Now, there is a chance of finding out the fate of the sibling whereas the story I wrote had already determined their fate, turning that part of the story from one of revenge to one of looking for answers.
Now having said that, you would want to have good trust and communication between DM and players to do this since events could unfold differently but everyone in my group seemed to really enjoy how our characters developed by doing it this way.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
As mentioned in other answers, the background would cover this. To play it through though, here is an example of how my DM in one campaign handled it.
They had us write up our backstories and then give it to them ahead of time. Then one-on-one would role play specific events in our backstory. All rolls where done using a straight d20 with no modifiers to signify an average person, prior to their adventuring of developing different skills. That also means you don't really need a character sheet at this point and could leave things like your class more open ended.
An example would be that I wrote that my character was left for dead after defending their sibling from an attack that ultimately killed the sibling. In role playing it however, my character managed to stand their ground for longer than I had envisioned before being taken down but upon recovering rolled so poorly was unable to determine what became of the sibling. Now, there is a chance of finding out the fate of the sibling whereas the story I wrote had already determined their fate, turning that part of the story from one of revenge to one of looking for answers.
Now having said that, you would want to have good trust and communication between DM and players to do this since events could unfold differently but everyone in my group seemed to really enjoy how our characters developed by doing it this way.
$endgroup$
As mentioned in other answers, the background would cover this. To play it through though, here is an example of how my DM in one campaign handled it.
They had us write up our backstories and then give it to them ahead of time. Then one-on-one would role play specific events in our backstory. All rolls where done using a straight d20 with no modifiers to signify an average person, prior to their adventuring of developing different skills. That also means you don't really need a character sheet at this point and could leave things like your class more open ended.
An example would be that I wrote that my character was left for dead after defending their sibling from an attack that ultimately killed the sibling. In role playing it however, my character managed to stand their ground for longer than I had envisioned before being taken down but upon recovering rolled so poorly was unable to determine what became of the sibling. Now, there is a chance of finding out the fate of the sibling whereas the story I wrote had already determined their fate, turning that part of the story from one of revenge to one of looking for answers.
Now having said that, you would want to have good trust and communication between DM and players to do this since events could unfold differently but everyone in my group seemed to really enjoy how our characters developed by doing it this way.
edited Aug 16 at 13:43
answered Aug 15 at 22:09
Matthew GreenMatthew Green
2804 silver badges12 bronze badges
2804 silver badges12 bronze badges
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$begingroup$
If you care to look to an alternate system for inspiration, Dungeon Crawl Classics has a new character option that I think was called a character funnel. You essentially generated a bunch of level 0 peasants (there were numerous tables to randomly determine the peasants background), then had them get caught up in a significant event, and those that survived gained level 1 and turned into PCs.
The one time I participated in such a game ended up being a lot of fun. Each player started with 5 peasants of various occupations, then our village was raided, and in the course of the ensuing battle most of our peasants died. I think we ended up averaging about 2 survivors per player, from which we picked our PCs and determined our classes. For me, having the characters background and transition to an adventurer be played at the table greatly influenced how I evolved them as a character.
I have often thought about adapting this process to DnD, but I have never sat down an worked it out.
$endgroup$
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I love the idea, it might be something I will adopt.
$endgroup$
– Helena
Aug 17 at 10:54
add a comment |
$begingroup$
If you care to look to an alternate system for inspiration, Dungeon Crawl Classics has a new character option that I think was called a character funnel. You essentially generated a bunch of level 0 peasants (there were numerous tables to randomly determine the peasants background), then had them get caught up in a significant event, and those that survived gained level 1 and turned into PCs.
The one time I participated in such a game ended up being a lot of fun. Each player started with 5 peasants of various occupations, then our village was raided, and in the course of the ensuing battle most of our peasants died. I think we ended up averaging about 2 survivors per player, from which we picked our PCs and determined our classes. For me, having the characters background and transition to an adventurer be played at the table greatly influenced how I evolved them as a character.
I have often thought about adapting this process to DnD, but I have never sat down an worked it out.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
I love the idea, it might be something I will adopt.
$endgroup$
– Helena
Aug 17 at 10:54
add a comment |
$begingroup$
If you care to look to an alternate system for inspiration, Dungeon Crawl Classics has a new character option that I think was called a character funnel. You essentially generated a bunch of level 0 peasants (there were numerous tables to randomly determine the peasants background), then had them get caught up in a significant event, and those that survived gained level 1 and turned into PCs.
The one time I participated in such a game ended up being a lot of fun. Each player started with 5 peasants of various occupations, then our village was raided, and in the course of the ensuing battle most of our peasants died. I think we ended up averaging about 2 survivors per player, from which we picked our PCs and determined our classes. For me, having the characters background and transition to an adventurer be played at the table greatly influenced how I evolved them as a character.
I have often thought about adapting this process to DnD, but I have never sat down an worked it out.
$endgroup$
If you care to look to an alternate system for inspiration, Dungeon Crawl Classics has a new character option that I think was called a character funnel. You essentially generated a bunch of level 0 peasants (there were numerous tables to randomly determine the peasants background), then had them get caught up in a significant event, and those that survived gained level 1 and turned into PCs.
The one time I participated in such a game ended up being a lot of fun. Each player started with 5 peasants of various occupations, then our village was raided, and in the course of the ensuing battle most of our peasants died. I think we ended up averaging about 2 survivors per player, from which we picked our PCs and determined our classes. For me, having the characters background and transition to an adventurer be played at the table greatly influenced how I evolved them as a character.
I have often thought about adapting this process to DnD, but I have never sat down an worked it out.
answered Aug 17 at 1:14
RozwelRozwel
1713 bronze badges
1713 bronze badges
$begingroup$
I love the idea, it might be something I will adopt.
$endgroup$
– Helena
Aug 17 at 10:54
add a comment |
$begingroup$
I love the idea, it might be something I will adopt.
$endgroup$
– Helena
Aug 17 at 10:54
$begingroup$
I love the idea, it might be something I will adopt.
$endgroup$
– Helena
Aug 17 at 10:54
$begingroup$
I love the idea, it might be something I will adopt.
$endgroup$
– Helena
Aug 17 at 10:54
add a comment |
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Related: Are there rules for creating level 0 characters?
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– MikeQ
Aug 15 at 8:56
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Could you clarify what exactly you mean by "0th level"?
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– V2Blast♦
Aug 15 at 9:06
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@V2Blast It's a term from earlier editions indicating an NPC without a class or level - an ordinary peasant or commoner, in other words. I thought it was still common parlance in 5e but perhaps I'm wrong.
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– Matt Thrower
Aug 15 at 9:08
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Could you clarify what you mean by "official ruling"?
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– Mark Wells
Aug 16 at 17:46
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@MarkWells: Judging from the body of the question, they're just asking whether any such official rules exist in 5e. I've edited the title accordingly.
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– V2Blast♦
Aug 17 at 1:39