51风流

Roleplaying club brings people together through storytelling

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51风流's Roleplaying Game Society. Photo by Anna Heil '16

51风流鈥檚 Roleplaying Game Society brings together students, faculty, and staff. Photo by Anna Heil 鈥16

A jungle ranger, an alchemist, a nomadic bard, and a cleric of the sun goddess struggle to save a fantasy desert region from a war fueled by racial discrimination. In other words, a small group of 51风流 students, staff, and faculty members are gathered together in the Coop for their weekly role-playing game session. This group is just one segment of a new organization on campus called the .

Formed last fall by Josh Miller 鈥17 and Jack McKay 鈥17, the club has quickly grown in popularity. Although it remains a primarily student organization, with approximately 40 active participants, the RPG club has also caught on with professors and staff members.

The whole club comes together for special events, but smaller groups form 鈥渃ampaigns鈥 composed of one 鈥済ame master鈥 and three to six players. Each campaign plays out a single storyline that is created by the game master, who crafts all aspects of the game, from setting to character background.

鈥淭he idea of role-playing boils down to one thing: you can temporarily become someone you are not, in a place you are not, and experience the experiences of others,鈥 said Miller. 鈥淭his is universally intriguing, because everyone wonders what it鈥檚 like [to be] in someone else鈥檚 shoes.鈥

Armed with just a handful of dice, a map of the land, and a few notes, the players have to use their wit and imagination to complete quests, succeed in combat, and solve puzzles created by the game master. These campaigns can be as short as a single day or continue for years.

Timothy Collett, who works in the as a technology support analyst, described the experience as 鈥渁 story that we鈥檙e all writing together.鈥

He added: 鈥淚t鈥檚 creative not just on the part of the [game master] who creates the world and the adventure, but also on the part of the players, who are creating the actual story minute by minute while playing.

, who teaches , recently attended the club鈥檚 Pathfinder Tournament of one-on-one battles. Solomon said that the role-playing games have helped him in his career as an academic and a teacher. 鈥淚t taught me creativity, it provided me with important writing and speaking skills, and even taught me how to project manage,鈥 he explained.

For Miller, the best part is how easily friendships develop. As they work together to discover their mythical heritage or compete in an interplanetary rhetoric contest, connections are instantly formed. Even the cyborg searching for extra robotic appendages and the psychic with multiple personalities can find common ground.