Player now canon
(media.scored.co)
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I actually played a 3 INT/ YES STR half ogre in my early d&d games. I pretty much treated the roleplaying as a cross between zany fantasy surrealism and the average COPS episode.
A good friend of mine played an all-in grappler with retardism (literally a caveman) in a campaign that I ran. It sparked so many ridiculous moments that I still smile fondly remembering it years later. A favorite was still him trying a jump check to leap from their moving aircraft that was in the middle of a dogfight to try and tackle the enemy aircraft all because he was too stupid to understand physics, and then he rolls a nat 20 on the check, passes the grab check to get hold of the other craft once he's there, and then proceeds to rip the door off, go inside, and beat the enemy crew to death.
"This jail wall?"
"Yes, but there's no door."
"Me go through wall."
"There's no door..."
"Me go through wall."
"Roll strength check."
There is a reason why "Special Person" is one of the most popular backgrounds in Arcanum. There is a lot of fun to be had in playing a literal retard in these settings.
The problem always being, the line between offensive and not is far too dangerous to do it in any official setting and that line gets more vague by the day over what will piss somebody off.
Its like what Cards Against Humanity once was versus now.
They really don't make them like they used to. I need to play through that game again.