Addon Spotlight: FlagRSP2 and MyRolePlay
FlagRSP and its descendents have long been the de facto standard addons that most roleplayes use to "flag" themselves, letting other roleplayers know at a glance not only that they're interested in roleplaying, but also sharing character descriptions and basic information about what sort of roleplaying they prefer. The original FlagRSP is defunct, but the torch has been passed to two worthy (and superior) successors: FlagRSP2 and MyRolePlay. Both use the same methods to communicate with other roleplayers, so you need only choose one and you'll be able to share information with players who use the other (be careful not to use both at the same time, however). Both addons help a lot with the problem of roleplayers being hard to find.
FlagRSP2 and MyRolePlay both give you a space to write things like your character's first or last names, a character title (such as "Priestess of the Dark" or "Wacky Troublemaker"), as well as some description about what your character looks like; and of course they both enable you to see the information other people have written about their characters too. Both have "roleplaying flags," which can tell other people whether you are a "casual" or "fulltime" roleplayer, as well as whether you are in or out of character at any given moment.
FlagRSP2 has a cleaner, more intuitive interface, in my opinion, and it has nice little popup windows for character information which can appear whenever you mouseover or target someone. MyRolePlay only has a popup button which you must click on to see other characters' information, but it also has two separate spaces for physical descriptions and story backgrounds, which FlagRSP2 users sometimes mix up together. MyRolePlay also uses less computer resources on my system, and keeps things running a bit smoother. I often switch between the two since I can't really decide which is best.
A few notes on using either of these addons well: As the wonderful comic Hammer of Grammar showcased last month, it can be tempting to use a bit too much melodrama when writing character descriptions. As we've said here on WoW Insider, it's important for characters to stay relatively normal, and to be drawn from real life experiences, unless the character's whole purpose is to be a silly farce of some sort. When writing FlagRSP2 or MyRolePlay descriptions, stay away from cliches such as "half-demon," "deep sadness," and "a patch over one eye." In fact, you might even consider limiting your description to just a paragraph or two -- some players do very well with just a single sentence, such as "He scowls at you."
For my own characters, I usually assume that people don't have a lot of time to read my descriptions, so I put the type of things they would notice first at the very beginning, gradually going into more and more detail as the description goes on. I try to keep the total description under 300 words or so, and I never put background story there -- that's something I save for people who take the time to get to know my characters by talking with them.
FlagRSP2 and MyRolePlay both give you a space to write things like your character's first or last names, a character title (such as "Priestess of the Dark" or "Wacky Troublemaker"), as well as some description about what your character looks like; and of course they both enable you to see the information other people have written about their characters too. Both have "roleplaying flags," which can tell other people whether you are a "casual" or "fulltime" roleplayer, as well as whether you are in or out of character at any given moment.
FlagRSP2 has a cleaner, more intuitive interface, in my opinion, and it has nice little popup windows for character information which can appear whenever you mouseover or target someone. MyRolePlay only has a popup button which you must click on to see other characters' information, but it also has two separate spaces for physical descriptions and story backgrounds, which FlagRSP2 users sometimes mix up together. MyRolePlay also uses less computer resources on my system, and keeps things running a bit smoother. I often switch between the two since I can't really decide which is best.
A few notes on using either of these addons well: As the wonderful comic Hammer of Grammar showcased last month, it can be tempting to use a bit too much melodrama when writing character descriptions. As we've said here on WoW Insider, it's important for characters to stay relatively normal, and to be drawn from real life experiences, unless the character's whole purpose is to be a silly farce of some sort. When writing FlagRSP2 or MyRolePlay descriptions, stay away from cliches such as "half-demon," "deep sadness," and "a patch over one eye." In fact, you might even consider limiting your description to just a paragraph or two -- some players do very well with just a single sentence, such as "He scowls at you."
For my own characters, I usually assume that people don't have a lot of time to read my descriptions, so I put the type of things they would notice first at the very beginning, gradually going into more and more detail as the description goes on. I try to keep the total description under 300 words or so, and I never put background story there -- that's something I save for people who take the time to get to know my characters by talking with them.
Filed under: AddOn Spotlight, RP







Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
jamiekg Jan 9th 2009 5:39AM
Tony - your imagination must be severely limited if you detest roleplayers so badly. Man - what must it be like to be unable to dream?
Hooper Oct 27th 2007 5:24PM
I am not a roleplayer, but I use MyRolePlay for one purpose: to see the Guild Rank/title of people in Guilds. It'll let me know if that person is important to their guild or a newbie. Just helps me get in a pre-pug prespective. Plus some Guilds have great ranking titles.
hpavc Oct 27th 2007 5:54PM
Add a dogtag to your current tooltip or mouseover target. That whole addone for one textphrase seems a lot.
PeeWee Oct 27th 2007 6:35PM
Both these addons add functionality that should have been in the default interface from Day 1. Giving your character a family name and a physical description, along with a space to keep important events would be awesome. Blizzard has done nothing but talking bullcrap about adding tools and functionality for RPers for the past two years.
In LOTRO you can even build a familty-tree for your character.
Beep Oct 27th 2007 6:52PM
Does every Roleplayer have a scar and a "deep sadness" --- seriously?
lirean Oct 27th 2007 8:28PM
I use RSP2 myself.
But an odd thing that recently everyone's been reporting that their discrptions are being cut off due to a new anti spam blocking on channels.
Fantastic stuff for the RPers, a shame such things arn't included in the game.
PeeWee Oct 27th 2007 9:04PM
@5
You are correct. What has happened on a lot of servers is this: Addons and macros can no longer send more than one line of text, to prevent spamming. On said servers, FlagRSP, MyRolePlay, ImmersionRP, Guild Event Manager, Group Calendar, Duckiebank and _every_ single addon that transmits information over chat channels has been killed.
GG Blizzard.
Katsuya Kaiba Oct 28th 2007 3:33AM
Attack of the Mary Sues! The brightness from their spotlights on themselves melt the faces off of many a RPer.
Tchernobyl Oct 28th 2007 8:05AM
@4
Check the comic "hammer of grammar". this is actually a screenshot of said comic, mocking the "deep sadness" thing that seems very prevalent amongst RPers :P
Theserene Oct 28th 2007 5:45PM
Funny Tony, that's EXACTLY what we think of you.
Duerma Oct 29th 2007 10:37AM
Hey, Captain TonyMotorola of the USS Ignorance strikes again! /ignore
Flag RSP is a great tool. Like any tool, it can be abused, but in general, it is THE addon for roleplayers. A last name is just generally "duh", and the physical description can really help to set your character apart. No, I don't mean you write about your "great sadness" or whatever, but you can say that you have a piercing in your tongue, have freckles on your shoulder, etc. - details that simply are not possible with the current character modeling system.
It's a nice way to start up RP too - when my character was pregnant, I couldn't change the 3D model, but I wrote it into my RSP, and people seriously stopped me and asked when the baby was due. It was wonderful.
doug Oct 30th 2007 7:41AM
You know what creeps me out? People who troll the same topic, over and over again, leaving the same tired comments, over and over again.
Mad Cow Oct 29th 2007 10:19AM
That 'Wolfchaser' description creeps me out ...
Badger Oct 29th 2007 2:38PM
This comic Wins. That was exactly the experience I had with 99% of the people I met on an RP-PvP server.