All the World's a Stage: The Roleplaying Spectrum
Today David returns to All the World's a Stage, still taking a break from his series of roleplaying lore guides for World of Warcraft. Instead, he shares a few thoughts especially for people who may roleplay all the time without realizing it.
There are lots of people playing World of Warcraft out there, and if you gave a survey to each one of them, asking, "are you a roleplayer?" most of them would probably say "no." But if you actually listened to them, or engaged with them in conversation about it, you might learn a lot of things that surveys usually miss. Many people who say they are not roleplayers actually have an imagination of their character's backstory, personality, or even just individual style. They may not know how to act out the character, and they may not have friends they feel they can act out with, yet at the same time, they do have a sense of their character as their own little creative exploration.
The distinction between roleplayers and non-roleplayers is not as clear as people seem to think. In fact, there's a whole spectrum of different kinds of players between those who say they roleplay and those who say they don't -- and most people probably find themselves somewhere in the middle.
The Extremes
The most noticeable, and most easily pointed at when it comes to blame and fault-finding, are those people at either extreme of the RP spectrum who simply cannot tolerate anyone else other than their own sort. On one end, the "RP Scrooge," believes that roleplaying is all hogwash and that anyone who roleplays is wasting their time, going demented in the brain, and so on. Some RP Scrooges are very vocal about their opinions and seem to seek out confrontations with roleplayers.
The opposite end of the RP spectrum, the "RP Fanatic," views roleplaying as the only worthwhile way to play the game. They tend to feel that they are the center of their realm's roleplaying universe all but a very few of their favorite roleplayers are simply unworthy of attention in their eyes because they just suck at it so badly, and they are very critical of anyone who roleplays the "wrong way."
This column isn't about either of these two sorts of people. They do exist, but they do not change their mind. If and when they interact with me, either in the game or through comments on this website, I tend to simply ignore them, or else to reply to them without arguing, and instead I just try to help provide a more positive alternative opinion, so that other readers can come away with good feelings rather than mere empty criticism. I never try to change their mind, rather I try to illustrate that things needn't be so extreme and full of blame.
The RP Atheist
What we might call the "RP Athiest" is a very different kind of player from the Scrooge. He may think RP is rather silly, or he may have no opinion on it at all (he may even enjoy in-depth roleplaying in pen-and-paper roleplaying games such as Dungeons and Dragons or Vampire), but he does not enjoy roleplaying in WoW for some reason. Instead, he just goes about playing WoW in his way with his friends, as a computer game, without even a single thread of character development, creative imagination, or theatrical flair. He certainly does not go about insulting roleplayers (or anyone else) on account of their hobbies and interests.
I call this type of player an RP Atheist because he has no feeling or sense of roleplaying in WoW -- in a way, you could say he doesn't believe in it in the same way some people don't believe in God. They see that other people believe, and they have no problem with that, but they just don't share that belief themselves. An RP Atheist may be a very devout and religious person with regard to actual religion -- my use of such a word here has absolutely no connection with religious belief whatsoever.
The RP Agnostic
The majority of WoW players, in my experience, fall into a different category: they have a sense of their character as a person in one way or another, whether as just a vague characterization (e.g. "Wham! Bam! -- Zygor is so cool with his giant hammer."), as an actual personality (e.g. "Zygor only cares about battle -- nothing else, except maybe chocolate, occupies his mind"), or as someone with something of a background story behind him (e.g. "Zygor is the son of a heroic tauren general who died in a desperate battle for survival against the centaurs when Zygor was just 13 years old.").
None of this influences they way these people play the game so much as it changes they way they think and feel when they play the game. Instead of thinking only about the various strategies and dynamics of the computer battles, they also have a sense of their character participating in some kind of meaningful story; there may be no plot as such, but there is that feeling you get with stories, that something is happening, and you want to see what happening next. In a way, they are roleplaying only with themselves, and their character's story happens almost entirely within their own mind. If you ask them whether they are a roleplayer or not, they'd say they aren't, but if you gave them the right opportunity, they might give it a try one day. I call them RP Agnostics because of this vague sense they have that they are not a member of the roleplaying community, yet at the same time they do have roleplaying ideas of their own. These ideas may be perpetually vague, but they're okay with that.
This is a completely valid way to play the game -- "All the World's a Stage" is written as much for these players as for any others.
The RP Layman
Your standard "roleplayer" probably spends most of his time playing the computer game aspect of WoW, fighting monsters, raiding, PvPing, and whatnot. But he also enjoys finding time to hang out with his roleplaying friends, and may even have signed up on an RP server and joined a roleplaying guild with the hope of melding the computer game and creative roleplaying aspects together as much as possible. Alternately, he may keep both aspects separate but more or less equal (or at least significant), as different elements of the game which he enjoys. One might refer to these players as "RP Laymen" because they have a definite commitment (even if only a minor one) to the hobby of roleplaying and would identify themselves as a roleplayer on the aforementioned survey.
The RP Evangelical
A few roleplayers are especially enthusiastic about their hobby and view it as something more than a fun pastime. For these players, roleplaying feels like an art, or at least gives a more developed sense of passion and fulfillment. Again using religious terminology in a special way, one could call them "RP Evangelicals" for their enthusiasm and devotion for their magical hobby, as well as their desire to promote roleplaying in the WoW community. They do not view roleplaying as an actual religion, of course -- if they did, that might be closer to the extreme of RP Fanaticism -- but they are excited, and they hope more and more people will join them in this activity they find to be valuable.
Obviously people like me fit in this category pretty snugly. We may write about roleplaying on blogs or forums, or we may just talk and think about it a lot with our friends in the game. We may try out things like carefully thought-out character development, scripted roleplaying experiences, or even total-immersion roleplaying. Our preferences and styles differ widely and we don't always agree with each other, but we all share a love of our hobby that doesn't go away so easily.
Riding the Spectrum
Wherever you fit on the RP Spectrum, or however you would define your own particular category, the real point here is that there are a diversity of approaches to roleplaying and that the WoW community is not divided up into those who roleplay and those who do not. Each WoW player should feel free to explore any point along this spectrum (except, I hope, the extremes) and to shift between them at different stages in his or her WoW career.
You should even feel free to throw my categories out the window and define yourself in whatever way you like. You can make roleplaying as big or as small a part of your Warcraft experience as you want, and you can appreciate other people's experiences in this hobby whether or not you ever choose to join them in it.
All the World's a Stage comes to you a bit late today, because the author finds himself extremely busy planning a top-secret event. We take a break this week from the series on roleplaying within the lore in order to take a look at different kinds of roleplayers. You might be interested to check out similar articles about how to really get into your character's head, how to find the center of the roleplaying universe, and how to follow the ten commandments of roleplaying.
There are lots of people playing World of Warcraft out there, and if you gave a survey to each one of them, asking, "are you a roleplayer?" most of them would probably say "no." But if you actually listened to them, or engaged with them in conversation about it, you might learn a lot of things that surveys usually miss. Many people who say they are not roleplayers actually have an imagination of their character's backstory, personality, or even just individual style. They may not know how to act out the character, and they may not have friends they feel they can act out with, yet at the same time, they do have a sense of their character as their own little creative exploration.
The distinction between roleplayers and non-roleplayers is not as clear as people seem to think. In fact, there's a whole spectrum of different kinds of players between those who say they roleplay and those who say they don't -- and most people probably find themselves somewhere in the middle.
The Extremes
The most noticeable, and most easily pointed at when it comes to blame and fault-finding, are those people at either extreme of the RP spectrum who simply cannot tolerate anyone else other than their own sort. On one end, the "RP Scrooge," believes that roleplaying is all hogwash and that anyone who roleplays is wasting their time, going demented in the brain, and so on. Some RP Scrooges are very vocal about their opinions and seem to seek out confrontations with roleplayers.
The opposite end of the RP spectrum, the "RP Fanatic," views roleplaying as the only worthwhile way to play the game. They tend to feel that they are the center of their realm's roleplaying universe all but a very few of their favorite roleplayers are simply unworthy of attention in their eyes because they just suck at it so badly, and they are very critical of anyone who roleplays the "wrong way."
This column isn't about either of these two sorts of people. They do exist, but they do not change their mind. If and when they interact with me, either in the game or through comments on this website, I tend to simply ignore them, or else to reply to them without arguing, and instead I just try to help provide a more positive alternative opinion, so that other readers can come away with good feelings rather than mere empty criticism. I never try to change their mind, rather I try to illustrate that things needn't be so extreme and full of blame.
The RP Atheist
What we might call the "RP Athiest" is a very different kind of player from the Scrooge. He may think RP is rather silly, or he may have no opinion on it at all (he may even enjoy in-depth roleplaying in pen-and-paper roleplaying games such as Dungeons and Dragons or Vampire), but he does not enjoy roleplaying in WoW for some reason. Instead, he just goes about playing WoW in his way with his friends, as a computer game, without even a single thread of character development, creative imagination, or theatrical flair. He certainly does not go about insulting roleplayers (or anyone else) on account of their hobbies and interests.
I call this type of player an RP Atheist because he has no feeling or sense of roleplaying in WoW -- in a way, you could say he doesn't believe in it in the same way some people don't believe in God. They see that other people believe, and they have no problem with that, but they just don't share that belief themselves. An RP Atheist may be a very devout and religious person with regard to actual religion -- my use of such a word here has absolutely no connection with religious belief whatsoever.
The RP Agnostic
The majority of WoW players, in my experience, fall into a different category: they have a sense of their character as a person in one way or another, whether as just a vague characterization (e.g. "Wham! Bam! -- Zygor is so cool with his giant hammer."), as an actual personality (e.g. "Zygor only cares about battle -- nothing else, except maybe chocolate, occupies his mind"), or as someone with something of a background story behind him (e.g. "Zygor is the son of a heroic tauren general who died in a desperate battle for survival against the centaurs when Zygor was just 13 years old.").
None of this influences they way these people play the game so much as it changes they way they think and feel when they play the game. Instead of thinking only about the various strategies and dynamics of the computer battles, they also have a sense of their character participating in some kind of meaningful story; there may be no plot as such, but there is that feeling you get with stories, that something is happening, and you want to see what happening next. In a way, they are roleplaying only with themselves, and their character's story happens almost entirely within their own mind. If you ask them whether they are a roleplayer or not, they'd say they aren't, but if you gave them the right opportunity, they might give it a try one day. I call them RP Agnostics because of this vague sense they have that they are not a member of the roleplaying community, yet at the same time they do have roleplaying ideas of their own. These ideas may be perpetually vague, but they're okay with that.
This is a completely valid way to play the game -- "All the World's a Stage" is written as much for these players as for any others.
The RP Layman
Your standard "roleplayer" probably spends most of his time playing the computer game aspect of WoW, fighting monsters, raiding, PvPing, and whatnot. But he also enjoys finding time to hang out with his roleplaying friends, and may even have signed up on an RP server and joined a roleplaying guild with the hope of melding the computer game and creative roleplaying aspects together as much as possible. Alternately, he may keep both aspects separate but more or less equal (or at least significant), as different elements of the game which he enjoys. One might refer to these players as "RP Laymen" because they have a definite commitment (even if only a minor one) to the hobby of roleplaying and would identify themselves as a roleplayer on the aforementioned survey.
The RP Evangelical
A few roleplayers are especially enthusiastic about their hobby and view it as something more than a fun pastime. For these players, roleplaying feels like an art, or at least gives a more developed sense of passion and fulfillment. Again using religious terminology in a special way, one could call them "RP Evangelicals" for their enthusiasm and devotion for their magical hobby, as well as their desire to promote roleplaying in the WoW community. They do not view roleplaying as an actual religion, of course -- if they did, that might be closer to the extreme of RP Fanaticism -- but they are excited, and they hope more and more people will join them in this activity they find to be valuable.
Obviously people like me fit in this category pretty snugly. We may write about roleplaying on blogs or forums, or we may just talk and think about it a lot with our friends in the game. We may try out things like carefully thought-out character development, scripted roleplaying experiences, or even total-immersion roleplaying. Our preferences and styles differ widely and we don't always agree with each other, but we all share a love of our hobby that doesn't go away so easily.
Riding the Spectrum
Wherever you fit on the RP Spectrum, or however you would define your own particular category, the real point here is that there are a diversity of approaches to roleplaying and that the WoW community is not divided up into those who roleplay and those who do not. Each WoW player should feel free to explore any point along this spectrum (except, I hope, the extremes) and to shift between them at different stages in his or her WoW career.
You should even feel free to throw my categories out the window and define yourself in whatever way you like. You can make roleplaying as big or as small a part of your Warcraft experience as you want, and you can appreciate other people's experiences in this hobby whether or not you ever choose to join them in it.
Filed under: All the World's a Stage (Roleplaying), Analysis / Opinion, Virtual selves, RP







Reader Comments (Page 1 of 4)
nyctef Apr 6th 2009 11:20AM
I'm not a roleplayer myself, but I do enjoy killing Scarlet Crusaders as my death knight before resurrecting them as ghouls and forcing them to attack their former allies. I think that sort of thing brings out the death knight in all of us :)
Jason Apr 6th 2009 11:50AM
Sorry, that meant to go to the "first" poster...I'd delete it if I could.
Dustin Apr 6th 2009 12:09PM
Scorn fail!
Upgray3dd Apr 6th 2009 11:23AM
Finally something new in this Column. I like "So you want...", but
I was starting to get a little sick of it. Something new is always the
right call if a weekly column has been the SAME for months.
So, I am really liking this column. I get what you are saying about
the RP spectrum. I am an RP layman at the moment.
drahliana Apr 6th 2009 11:24AM
Roleplayers tend to get very defensive because of the prevalance of those few who think that their primary hobby is deliberate griefing or mocking of those who roleplay. Many rp laymen may take these people as being unapproachable as a reult.
The truth of the matter is that most roleplayers are very tolerant of earnest effort and are more than willing to go out of thier way in assisting rp novices in getting thier feet wet. One never knows until one tries.
Sakinah Apr 6th 2009 11:43AM
I would say I'm an RP evangelical...but I agree that most 'hardcore' rp'ers will go out of their way to help novices get their feet wet and encourage them to rp.
I recently moved to an RP server and have been very happy doing so- but I'm an rp'er by nature. Some of my friends weren't, but rolled alts, gave it a try, and now at least one of them couldn't imagine the game without RP in it anymore. :D
Spread the love, spread the fun, and if someone says it's not for them, smile, leave an open invitation to look you up if they change their mind, and keep on rp'ing!
drahliana Apr 13th 2009 2:26PM
For those non-Death knights who want that same experience... the Ebon Blade has a daily for you.... :)
Karilyn Apr 6th 2009 11:27AM
Yep, I'm on the higher end of the RP Agnostic side. Don't really RP with anyone else, but I have a definite and clear image of what my character's background story is.
A rather, common backstory. She isn't particularly grand. She's mostly just a Tauren who joined the Horde military in hopes of protecting her friends and families against the Centaurs, and she sorta got swept away with time to where she is is now, up in Northrend, playing games with dragons, the servents of titans and lesser gods.
It's easier to understand her humorous stance at how her journey has lead her to this point.
AyaJulia Apr 6th 2009 12:08PM
Kudos to you. No, seriously. There aren't enough normal people in the RP world, and that's why I don't do it anymore. Everyone's got to be Arthas's sister's niece's best friend, or a vampire, or a spy, or an amnesiac, or something else completely silly. Not enough people who were simply born in (insert starter area here) and decided to serve the (insert faction here) in hopes of quelling the (insert racial starter enemy here) when they found the adventuring life was for them or otherwise found themselves caught up in something bigger than them.
DeathPaladin Apr 6th 2009 1:09PM
@ Karilyn
While I will agree with you that there needs to be more regular people in RP, but there isn't anything wrong with having special or weird characters as long as they don't degenerate into Mary Sue-ism. A human that's ex-Defias, for example, can be a very interesting character so long as they don't claim to be something stupid like Van Cleef's sibling/child/trusted lieutenant.
Of course, this comes from someone capable of creating some really bizarre backstories. My Draenei Paladin Engineer, for example, plays like a supervillain (it's kind of a long story, mostly as a result of some impromptu RP that resulted in me making another paladin in my guild cry). He'd probably be a reformed supervillain, though. He knows now that proposing to build an orbital death ray which would use a Naaru as ammunition (and providing detailed blueprints on how to construct it) would only get him thrown into the Arcatraz or Violet Hold or some other Azerothian supermax prison.
Of course, if I were an actual roleplayer, I would only bring out that Paladin when all the people involved in the roleplaying are okay with exceptionally bizarre characters.
DeathPaladin Apr 6th 2009 1:10PM
That was meant to be @AyaJulia, not Karilyn.
Stupid reply function only allowing you to respond to the original poster and not one of the other repliers
Worcester Apr 6th 2009 4:00PM
More Kudos on a good topic. I do read the column often, but this was a nice change of pace.
I think I fall into the RP Agnostic currently. I come from a background of pencil and paper games, so I do enjoy RP, but I also started WoW solo, so I didn't dive right in. For me, the only real RP I do is in my head, with my own character and actions.
I also appreciate when RPers decide to keep it simple. My character would be much the same way. As an Undead, I have a bit of an advantage. I don't necessarily remember who I once was, and I might not want to keep being that same person even if I did. I actually prefer to believe that I fell a lifetime before the current situation. Once plague-ridden corpses began to fill my humble mausoleum, I rose with the rest of them and began my new "life", in every sense of the word. I feel like the moral ambiguity of the Undead (and a Rogue in my case) goes well with a personal sense of ambiguity. In any case, I would never RP a character with any fame or notoriety.
Aaron A. Apr 6th 2009 5:00PM
I agree. A world of RP-ers should be like the real world in that respect: a few great people (prepopulated as NPC's), a few people who are somehow related to greatness, but mostly a bunch of ordinary joes. My Dwarven Warrior is just this guy, you know? He was raised in the standard Dwarven traditions, including the fine arts of Mining and Blacksmithing, which is pretty standard knowledge within his clan. Though he has served honorably for the Ironforge Clan and later the Alliance, he's not particularly noteworthy in any way.
I've also conjured up a bit of a backstory to connect my alts. Like the cast of "Friends", they're connected enough to be plausible, but not so much that it requires a long and complicated explanation. Character A knows B and C, B knows C and D, D knows E, but all character A really knows about character E is that she's a trustworthy source of herbs and elixirs.
vexis58 Apr 6th 2009 6:46PM
Me too Karilyn. I rerolled on a roleplaying server because I was hoping they'd be able to type a little more legibly than people on regular PvE servers (and I was right, for the most part). Not all of my characters have a backstory, in fact strangely enough my main character never has one while I'm playing her. I did come up with a good background between my paladin and my main in BC, my priest.
My paladin was the older sister, and she was just a regular draenei footsoldier, fighting for the light and all that, and her younger sister is much less physically strong, but she looks up to her sister and was always Holy spec. But when WotLK came out, my paladin was killed in the Scourge invasion and resurrected as a death knight. The priestess spent weeks mourning in Shattrath. When she eventually reunited with her sister in Dalaran, she decided the light had forsaken both of them and swore to be Shadow spec from then on.
I'd never actually RP with people, but I do like to think about what kind of people my characters are.
pandaba Apr 6th 2009 6:52PM
I like your simple backstory a lot. I think this is one of the reasons why Taurens are the best races for rp. Blizz never bothered to flesh out their history as much as the other races and that gives players a tremendous amount of freedom in what they want to be.
My Tauren hunter has a small problem with his family. Dad is a druid and a rather serious one. He always wanted me, his only son, to follow in his footsteps. But I never could take any of the Earthmother stuff seriously and never could devote myself to the years of study required. Just not a religious or academic bone in my body.
But I am good with my hands, love to build things, and occasionally like to see huge explosions, so I somehow found some engineers to train me. This didn't make Dad happy at all. I can't stop trying to impress him even if it never works.
For example, I demonstrated the gnomish shrink ray at the last family gathering to show Mum that it was possible to make the family kodo fit into her bag for easy portability. Of course the damned thing backfired, and Dad had to spend the rest of the day as the size of a gnome, and fuming terribly. Have to say hearing his normally deep voice suddenly become rather squeaky was kinda amusing, even if my sisters and I had the good sense not to laugh at the time.
So thats what rp is for me. Just being an ordinary person in extraordinary and often depressing circumstances and trying to find something ridiculous in all of it.
Juniper Apr 6th 2009 11:35AM
About the whole "they might roll play and not even know it".
I've been converted by wow.
in the nearly 4 years I've played I've never liked role play in wow, or outside wow for that matter. It wasn't until Wrath that I decided to reroll on a brand new server (none RP ofcourse) with a few RL friends. I picked a druid....and everything changed.
I was no longer some Generic DPS class, I was...interesting. I'm in a raiding guild and we all have great gear, more gold than sense and have everthing we want....but I only have a single ground mount. And if Blizzard gave me an Epic Travel Form I'd try and get that single mount deleted.
I'm a druid, What do I need mounts for?
I RolePlay my druid for some unknown reason. I even go as far as refering to myself in the guilds forum/guild chat as "the local tree" (resto ftw). I even chose a very Druidy name, Juniper.
All my alts are also called Tree's/Bushes/General plant things. (My bank alt being "Sapling". Cute!)
I've been converted to a semi roleplayer by simply finding something worthwhile to RP about.
Screw the Evil Undead or Deathknights, Screw the Paladins and their richeous virtues.....I just want to be a god damn tree.
Juni.
drahliana Apr 6th 2009 12:27PM
You're right as a Druid you obviously don't need the flying mounts.
Still there are rp flavor reasons that would be viable reasons to occasionally mount.
1. Cenarian War Gryphon. For those times when you want to fly in making a personal appearance. This makes a statement as to your Druids standing with the Cenarian Expedition and it's logical to extend it to your standing in Druid circles in general.
2. Company.... A fair number of these mounts, like the hippogryph and the dragons are smart enough to talk to. Other like the tradtional saber cat are simply comfortable for many Kaldorei to have around. (make obvious substitutions for Taurens here)
Juniper Apr 6th 2009 12:35PM
Its not just flying mounts, ofcourse I'd prefer epic flight form as its Superior to a mount (instant cast and looks Amazing). I also shunned a ground mount until level 60 then had to conceed the fact I needed a faster form of Travel than a 40% speed increase form.
If I had the chance again and ofcourse the determination I'd level my druid without a single mount.
And yes all my mount whoring guildies think I'm daft :D
Jason Apr 6th 2009 11:35AM
You must be so proud. Your children's children will remember this glorious day and your fantastic achievement.
Jason Apr 6th 2009 11:36AM
That's like, the first background EVER released for WoW! So much mystery behind it...players had no idea what was coming...