How to assemble a character history for your roleplaying character
Last week, we talked about roleplaying descriptions for characters and what should be considered a descriptor for your character. Along the way, I also mentioned that a lot of people make the common assumption that a character's history should be a part of their description as well. After all, part of what makes up a person is everything that's happened to them, right? Sure! But not when we're using roleplaying addons that have a clearly defined spot for character history.
And that clarification is important, because there are still roleplay addons out there that don't have a character history tab at all. Does this mean you should type up your character's history as part of your description? Absolutely not. Descriptions are for descriptions, and history is for history. If your roleplay addon doesn't allow for a character history tab but you're really gung-ho about writing up that history for everyone to read, I'd suggest finding a roleplay addon that has a spot for all that backstory you're dying to tell.
Except for one thing -- you don't want to tell everyone everything.

There are a few things that are absolutely essential to writing a great character history.
- Length Keep it short. I am absolutely serious about this. While yes, it is really fun to share all that wonderful prose you've written about your character's life, not everyone wants to read it. And the longer that description is, the less likely it is that people are going to do so. If you keep it short and succinct, with just enough to capture someone's interest, you've done your job.
- Legibility It may not seem like a video game is some place where you'd want to use a spell-checker, but you'd be surprised. If your character's history is written completely in internet shorthand, other roleplayers will have to spend time deciphering just what exactly it is you're trying to say. And if they have to spend too long on that, they will give up before they figure it out.
- Lying low If your character has a deep, dark secret, blurting it out in the opening line of your character history wouldn't really be much of a secret, would it? Don't give away everything there is to know about your character in your character history -- all that does is tell other roleplayers everything there is to know about you. And if they know everything, why would they feel the need to say hello?
Character descriptions and histories can work really well hand in hand with each other. If you've got a dwarf, their history can include where they were born, where they grew up, possibly who their parents were, if they had any schooling, where they went to school -- general information about that character's life. But say that dwarf is harboring some sort of dark past. Maybe they were secretly working for the Dark Iron dwarves at one point in time or another. How do you put that in a character history without giving it away?
Mention that they were mysteriously absent for a few years, with no explanation. On your character description, add in an item that tips toward the Dark Iron dwarves -- a piece of jewelry, or an item of clothing, or even an obscured tattoo. You don't have to spell these things out for other roleplayers; you can simply set the clues there for them to put together at their whim or investigate further if they're curious.

Keep in mind, this is not the be-all, end-all guide to what should and should not be in a character history, nor is it an attempt to tell you how to play your game. Roleplaying is an exercise in cooperative creativity, a game where creativity is encouraged and, above all, a social activity. You can certainly roleplay anything you want, and you can certainly write anything you want. However, if you're including any of the points below, you may be alienating others -- and that's going to cut down on how much roleplay you actually get to do. Roleplay what you like, but be warned -- the following items may limit your roleplay rather than letting it flourish.
- Inappropriate language We discussed this last week with character descriptions, and the same applies to character history as well. ERP, or erotic roleplay, is one of those quiet facts of life on roleplaying servers. However, there are those who enjoy flaunting that aspect of their roleplay through roleplaying addons. As I said last week, there is no guarantee that the person reading your addon is of an appropriate age for that material. If you wouldn't want your younger sibling or child to be reading that type of material, keep it out of your character history.
- Impossible characters So you really, really like the idea of faeries, or catgirls, or anime characters that have suddenly found themselves transported to Azeroth, or zhevra/troll hybrids, or any other assortment of thing not normally seen in Azeroth. Look, if you really want to roleplay that kind of character, nobody is stopping you. However, it becomes less and less likely you will find anyone willing to roleplay with you if you are one of these strange, assorted things that do not exist in Azeroth. Roleplay it if you like, but you will be limiting yourself severely by doing so.
- Lore breaking Want to be Thrall's secret night elf companion? The long lost love child of Illidan and Tyrande? Rhonin's identical and far more powerful twin? Here's the problem with that: You don't exist. There is no such character in Warcraft lore. What about a Gilnean worgen that is 6,000 years old? That's right out, too -- Gilneas wasn't even around back then. The undiscovered new Guardian of Tirisfal? Nope, sorry, that's Med'an, and he was introduced in the Warcraft comics series. While the thought of somehow folding your character into official Warcraft lore is a tempting one, the problem with that is that the lore has already been established. Again, you are free to write this out and roleplay that kind of character if you want to, but most roleplayers are also fans of the lore in one way or another, and they'll avoid roleplaying with you if you're breaking the lore.

We've written a ton of posts on character development here, and there are other resources out there as well, of course.
- Wowpedia If you're looking for a brief history of your character's race, Wowpedia is pretty succinct (and pretty accurate, too). It also works if you're looking for the names of various locations your character may have been at one point in time or another in their lives or organizations that they may have been involved with.
- Time lines There are a series of articles on racial time lines that you can use to help you pinpoint lifespans and where your character may have been in their lives. You can find them here.
- Plot points If you're looking for more current history to refer to, rather than the distant past, check out this series of plot points for the various races of Azeroth.

What if you don't want to write your character's history at all? That's perfectly fine -- honestly, the majority of my characters have absolutely nothing in their history tab. It's not that I don't enjoy writing it out; it's that my characters are all selective enough about their pasts that it is highly unlikely anyone would know anything about them at all. That said, putting in a character history for the whole world to see seems slightly counterproductive to me, so I simply don't do it.
In general, character descriptions are by and large appreciated by the roleplaying public, because they'd like to know if there's anything to your character beyond what they see on the character model. Character history is like dessert -- it's nice to have around, but you don't really need it to enjoy your meal. If you don't want to include it, you really don't have to.
Character histories are a good way for other players to get to know a little more about your character and to draw their interest and, potentially, their roleplay. But when you're writing those descriptions, keep people's attention spans in mind and don't reveal more than you'd like people to know about. And remember, whether reading or writing a character's history, that history is out-of-character information. What you read out of character isn't what your character knows -- it's what you know.
Filed under: All the World's a Stage (Roleplaying)






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Akawaka Feb 4th 2012 3:20PM
Great article as always Anne but you should have posted the MLP friendship is Magic version of the song, it is such a keeper! ;p
Soeroah_the_second Feb 4th 2012 8:16PM
There's a FiM version?
Off to Youtube I go!
Steffan Feb 4th 2012 5:43PM
A great read! And now, finally, my strange need to type everything in WoW using correct grammar, spelling, etc. is finally paying off! Anyway, a quick question: Would an orc-draenei hybrid be acceptable to roleplay? I know Garona is, but I think she was magically aged, so I don't know if there could be others of appropriate age.
Deadborder Feb 4th 2012 6:13PM
Doable but difficult. You'd have to take into account the fact that there's very little lore on such hybrids, and only two are known to exist. Added to that, both were born before the opening of the Dark Portal, and as a result, are going to be on the older end of things for Orcs. (Remember, the Draenei were believed extinct until a ship-load of them crashed into Azeroth...)
An Orc-Draenei hybrid looks like an Orc with a lumpy forhead, and would be best represented in-game by an Orc model (Both Garona and Lansessotr the Blade are played by "stock" orcs, albeit the latter with an NPC skin). They are also not likely to be treated well by their fellow Orcs, and seen as outsiders at best, and freaks at the worst. Added to that, you'll have to take into account that they'd also be seen as a reminder of the Horde's ugly past, something that many would rather not think about full stop.
Durandal Feb 4th 2012 6:33PM
Great article, Anne! Now, I'd love to see examples of good and bad RP flags. Do you any sites where those are collected or even better, could you show us some here?
LynMars Feb 4th 2012 8:01PM
There are plenty of sites that will critique or flat out make fun of "bad" RSPs, but they tend to get nasty, elitist, and judgmental. Sometimes they spotlight good RSPs and give advice on ways to write a RSP or how to improve a "bad" RSP.
RPers' Lament could do this, when they weren't trying to craft jokes about the writing. They tried to never attack the writers themselves--an important part of critique some people can't separate, that a criticism of one's writing does NOT equal an attack on oneself as a person or even a writer--but there were times when some grudge matches were obviously occurring, despite claims. The "here's how this might be improved" often felt tacked on. But they never claimed it was anything but their personal opinions and subjective, and they did attempt to help some newer folks and spotlighted decent RSPs, and offered helpful advice at times. Those parts of the site are worth reading at least. They aren't really doing much with WoW lately, though.
Sites that actually collect good RSPs, or offer advice, are few and far between. I recall Lament even noted how much more traffic they got compared to those "Good Guy" sites (as people liked the ~drama~ that could occur). Checking server forums for the RP character threads, looking for their server wikis or story sites, might point to where peoples' RSPs are, or at least their character info in long form. RP Haven once had a "Show your RSP!" thread, years ago; I may dig it up and revise my own entries to it.
durandal Feb 5th 2012 8:14AM
@LynMars
Thanks a lot, these are very helpful sites, just what I was looking for.
Back when I was a member in an RP guild, we used to put these stories on our guild site where we could discuss them and point our fingers on lore mistakes and stuff, in a very friendly and constructive manner of course. These 'tested and approved' backstories couldn't be seen by non-members, though. In our RP guild, we generally left those stories out of our RSP flags because it just caused a lot problems with external roleplayers who couldn't (or didn't want to) separate between IC and OOC knowledge. So, the less they knew, the better the roleplay got.
LynMars Feb 4th 2012 7:52PM
Yes, this. Short and the major, important, commonly found bits are what should be in the history. I have a quick short summary in my background parts--and then a tinyurl.com link, or a neat little url, to a place where you can find stories and more background detail. Shadow Council has rp-haven.com for people to post stories and backgrounds on, a lot of servers have wikis, there are usually RP character threads on the official forums for each server, and guild websites are also handy places. Places like LiveJournal or other personal blogging sites and DeviantArt are handy places to toss up long, detailed character backgrounds that expand on the short preview in the RSP.
And, of course, RP itself. ;)
LynMars Feb 4th 2012 8:13PM
One more thing: Don't freaking copy someone's background info from one of those sources, change the names, and then try to pass off that RSP as your own character, backstory, and written work in general.
Had someone walk into my guild's IC meeting a couple weeks ago wanting to join. I opened the MRP, read the backstory tab, and realized it was my own words. Not just a similar concept to my Outland-born Human paladin with mother issues, but literally took the first 2 paragraphs of my backstory; they only changed character names. When confronted, they claimed it was their significant other who had leveled the character and filled in the RSP for them--and got the story idea from Skyrim, to boot. This person had already caused other trouble for another guild, so we didn't believe them.
They didn't seem to understand, either, how serious such things like TOS breaking and plagiarism could be--I flat told the player at one point that they were lucky this was just hobby writing, and not something I make money or academic rep from.
paul.morales91 Feb 4th 2012 8:51PM
Good read Anne. Though I don't roleplay much, I still love lore and really enjoy these articles. Question though, would it be possible to roleplay a troll who's NOT of the darkspear tribe? More specifically, would it be possible to roleplay a troll death knight who's a former Drakkari?
BugVoodoo Feb 5th 2012 10:35AM
It's possible, but safer to stick to Horde-friendly tribes like the Shatterspear and Revantusk or possibly a refugee from some of the lesser tribes, as long as they don't hold allegiance to their parent tribe anymore.
The Darkkari are tricky because, to be quite honest, they're so nasty and violent that the rest of the trolls, who appear to be into the whole nastiness and violence thing, took a step back and said, "Whoa, man, that's way over the top". An undead Drakkari miiight work, but why would they join the Horde instead of trying to return to their glorious ultra-violent tribe?
Dea ex Machina Feb 4th 2012 10:36PM
I'd like to add, writing 'RP to find out! ;-)' in the character history tab is annoying. Especially if that's ALL you write in that tab. You do not have to give everything or anything away in a bio, but that kind of thing is... it's like fishing with a blank hook and the promise that there's totally a tonne of tasty bait on shore, fer serious, it's gonna be so awesome, TRUST me.
Write SOMETHING. Write ONE SENTENCE. TWEET that sucker. You can get a lot out of a little, and still keep your big revelations secret. My shaman's bio just says ' "That old drunk? Huh. We all thought she was dead." ' That tells you what would be public knowledge, gives a hint that there is a larger story, but gives almost nothing away about the details.
It's not hard to write something like that!
'Curiously, he was buried without a name, but WITH a well-stocked alchemy kit.'
' "I'm sorry, but the details surrounding any given student's expulsion from the Dalaran Academy of Magic are confidential." '
'Him not runaway Peon. Why you think dat?'
See? And if folks want to RP to find out more, they WILL. Leave the coy OOC remarks and winky faces out of it.
Skarlette Feb 5th 2012 12:19AM
Regarding the "lore breaking" point (i.e. don't try to RP as Arthas' long lost brother or Zul'jin's secret daughter)...
There's another reason to keep your characters free of close lore entanglements. You have no control over how Blizzard decides to take the story in the future, and you may find yourself dragged along with a plot development you dislike.
Say you have a character who is Magni's mistress. You could play along with that for awhile, until one day...oops, Blizzard turned him to stone. Or you're traipsing around playing as the son of the great paladin Bolvar, and then suddenly Varian is back and Bolvar is crispy/frozen.
You have two choices: roll with the story as it changes in a way you may not like, or abandon the character.
I've been there. I don't really RP but some of my characters have stories in my own head. A few of my characters have lore-breaking Mary Sueish family connections, but I never force their stories on anyone else and I would certainly never include them in add-on descriptions. I just doodle little cartoons or skits about them for my own amusement, and make goofy screenshots that are funny to me given their supposed backstories.
That's not to say that all my characters are Illidan's second cousin's old girlfriend's lovechild. Most of them are pretty average citizens just finding their way in the world. But there are a few that--again, only for my own private entertainment--I imagine as being family to major lore figures.
One of them is still clinging to a vaguely plausible plot loophole to justify his existence. One is deeply grieving the loss of a beloved canon character but is forging ahead as best she can. Another is pretty much dead in the water thanks to recent lore developments.
At least new lore only messes with my own silly fanfics. I can only imagine what a pain it would be if I was part of an RP group where multiple people were impacted. So, all the more reason to keep your characters separate from lore figures.
Dazzin Feb 5th 2012 9:00AM
As an old school, paper and dice, gamer I love playing my toon In Character as I would if it were around the dinner table. Yes, I've created some back history for them and using MRP I post some information on them. I've even collaborated with other gamers on fanfic-let write ups of character interactions - much safer than attempting certain themes in game ;)
What I've not really been able to get used to is the 'RP dates' some players and guilds set up - where everyone gets together specifically to just RP. I'm pretty much always IC if I'm chatting in general with other toons - even type my troll's responses in a version of dialect. Some trade chat is OOC, raid mechanics as well - but otherwise I'm always IC so the concept of making a special event to RP is a bit odd to me.
Either way I hope RP doesn't ever really leave the game - its a big part of the fun for me.
HappyTreeDance Feb 5th 2012 10:05AM
One more bit of advice I would suggest to people regarding their character's history is to not get too bogged down with it. I've seen far too many (myself included when I started to RP) not actually RP because their history wasn't "done." It's understandable that you want to know who your character is before you get started, but a lot of people spend so much time thinking of who their character was that they never really figure out who their character is now.
My best RP toon, and the one who I'ver written over a thousand pages (really) of stories and in game RP for is one who I started out with only the basic of history for. I came up with a character concept that I really loved, along with a loose history, and just jumped in and started RPing with her. Over the years, I've really come to love getting to know this character. What I started with was, "Anti-authority paladin." From there, I decided that my character had a Farstrider father who was very demanding and wanted her to follow in his footsteps. She rebelled against him. During the attack on Silvermoon by Arthas, she lost all her friends. She became a blood knight to fight back. And that's really all I had to start RPing on.
I've had tons more fun RPing on her than I have on any of my toons that had a detailed history mapped out. I'm really a believer that the concept of your character is more important than their history. So yeah, my advice is to not obsess about crafting a perfect history. You can always figure out their history as you go along, uncovering reasons why your character acts the way they do. Tends to be more fun to discover these things than to force them, in my experience. :)
BugVoodoo Feb 5th 2012 10:29AM
Again, Crit This Flag ( http://critthisflag.livejournal.com/ ) is the most positive RP flag discussion/review site I've seen. But because it requires people to willingly post their own flags and in doing so agree to getting constructive feedback, it's a pretty quiet little community. Everyone likes to mock others when they do it wrong, but not many like to know what they could improve themselves. Therefore, most of your resources are going to be snark sites like Warcraft Sues and Roleplayer's Lament.
BugVoodoo Feb 5th 2012 10:29AM
On the subject of things that will limit your RP: "Cutesy" (or not-so-cutesy) OOC notes declaring every single one of your pet peeves or how you refuse to RP with anyone who doesn't RP walk everywhere or is wearing a particular outfit. It's likely that even people who wouldn't hit those nerves on you will avoid you simply because you come off as really unpleasant.