Maybe you can use these words and phrases: My character is a ... ∙ He/she comes from ... ∙ He/she likes to ... ∙ His/her biggest fear is ... I’ve ∙ water ∙ can’t ∙ mother ∙ I’ll ∙ cat ∙ did ∙ new ∙ shout ∙ us ∙ work ∙ would ∙ three ∙ town ∙ two ∙ yes ∙ red ∙ play ∙ something ∙ bed ∙ may ∙ who ∙ door clothes ∙ find ∙ good ∙ next ∙ couldn’t ∙ need ∙ great ∙ through ∙ baby ∙ any ∙ around ∙ let’s ∙ only ∙ thought ∙ still ∙ know soon ∙ round ∙ animals ∙ tree ∙ king ∙ man ∙ after ∙ going ∙ wanted ∙ took ∙ fish ∙ thirty-five / 35 Rhyming words you may use ball - fall tall - small face - place - race all - call soon - moon make - cake hero - zero hot - not day - stay cook - look say - play bed - head - red town - brown four - door two - shoe eight - skate Find out! • Like most stories, D&D usually has a beginning, middle and end. • For example, in the beginning the heroes might be chasing goblins that have been causing trouble in town, in the middle of the story they might find out that the goblins were forced by a troll to make trouble and the end might be the heroes facing the troll. • No matter what happens in the story the best way to make it more fun is to make every character more complex. • Make up a character for D&D and describe him as well as you can, not just how he looks, but also what kind of a person he is. What he likes, what he fears and so on.
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