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Thread: The funniest/most idiotic thing your players have done

  1. #16
    Join Date
    Jan 2001
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    Victoria, TX usa
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    383
    1. Two of my players were playing Elves in a gurps game, they had been together for a while in the story lines. The third player was a dwarf. Elves used the dwarf to check for traps. dwarf rolls down the stairs.

    2. The players have found thier way to a magical city, that is suspended about 2 miles up in the air. The fastest and most common form of travel was by a pair of thought contoled wings, design that anyone could use them. the easiest way to learn them was to get pushed off one of the platforms and natural reaction would spread the wings and let you fly. No problem right. One player jumps with his wings on and likes the flight, the second has to be pushed with his wings on. They both land and laugh about it. My character is still watching, without putting the wings on. And is pushed off.. after .5 mile they realize I am not wearing wings. At 1 mile they jump. At 1.5 miles they catch up with my character.. Needly to say I developed a sever phobia about falling.
    May your worlds be at peace. Never assume, that the pointy eared first officer is Vulcan.

  2. #17
    Join Date
    Jun 2002
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    Heavy Metal Universe
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    In the first ep of our series, the counselor, Eloid Fastilas, whose hobby was holoprogramming, used to carry miniature holographic generators that she leaved everywhere, and that displayed "Eloid was here".

    (One season later, she learned she was a clone several years old only, and that her personality and memories where all made up. The character began a depression and ended her life to save a world because she couldn't take it anymore. Great character development....
    Shouldn't have taken the highest Dark Secret and told me to do whatever I wanted with it... Nyaa haha ).

    =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
    Expanded Spacecraft Operations, a 100+ page sourcebook for CODA Trek

  3. #18

    Talking

    Ok... This is telling on me. Once about 10-12 years ago I was playing Bushido. We were doing this epic quest and for this episode had entered a small town. Just outside the city limits there was a den of Vampires. Of course the townspeople know of the Vampires. Since Japanese vampires suffer from some sort of OCD they leave piles of rice all around the city. The vampires go count every kernel in the pile giving the townspeople time to kill them.

    Our group returns from slaying the head vampire and are met by an angry mob. Not believing that we're not vampires they pour a sack of rice on the ground so they can test us. I turn to my companions and ask... "Do we count the rice?"

    Needless to say we had to make a hasty getaway. From that point on I got the nickname Riceboy. It didn't help when our character basically became super ninjas as it was the perfect sidekick name. Also there was an incident where we were on lookout and I had to go get food and fell asleep in the bowl of rice I got for us.

    I wasn't in the group for this next one, but I've heard about it. A group of D&D players decided to change things up and played a Star Trek game for a change. They've been boarded and they are positive there are Klingons on the other side of the door.

    GM: "What do you want to do?"
    Player: "I go up to the door and listen."
    GM: "You do what? Tell me exactly what you're doing."
    Player: "I go up to the door, crouch down, and listen. What do I hear?"
    GM: "Swish"

    And the moral of the story? Remember... when you're in the future the doors open on their own.

    This one's a classic that a friend of mine told me. It still cracks me up.

    dm

  4. #19
    Originally posted by xanix
    Since Japanese vampires suffer from some sort of OCD they leave piles of rice all around the city. The vampires go count every kernel in the pile giving the townspeople time to kill them.
    Ah yes, the Oriental Vampire weakness. Oddly, this makes the autistic Vampire the most capable.

    Pour a sack of rice on the floor.

    "3,558" Says Rainman the Vampire as he launches into you!

    Seroiusly thogh. I am not sure if the OCD is for counting or tidying. Not that it matters too much.


    I wasn't in the group for this next one, but I've heard about it. A group of D&D players decided to change things up and played a Star Trek game for a change. They've been boarded and they are positive there are Klingons on the other side of the door.

    GM: "What do you want to do?"
    Player: "I go up to the door and listen."
    GM: "You do what? Tell me exactly what you're doing."
    Player: "I go up to the door, crouch down, and listen. What do I hear?"
    GM: "Swish"

    And the moral of the story? Remember... when you're in the future the doors open on their own.

    This one's a classic that a friend of mine told me. It still cracks me up.

    dm
    But at least they got to find out if there are indeed Klingons on the other side of the door.
    DanG/Darth Gurden
    The Voice of Reason and Sith Lord

    “Putting the FUNK! back into Dysfunctional!”

    Coming soon. The USS Ganymede NCC-80107
    "Ad astrae per scientia" (To the stars through knowledge)

  5. #20

    USS Gryphon Blooper Reel...

    Last week, a computer malfunction led to the Xo and part of the Gryphon's crew being onboard the USS Gallant when it decided the Gryphon was attacking it.

    The confused and wacked out computer gave the Gryphon a full spread to which Capt Dumont replied:

    "Cmdr Shinoda, what the f*ck are you doing?"

    Maybe you had to be there, but Chris' delivery of that line was flawless.
    Jeffery "Shran" Keown
    Star Trek: Sovereign
    NCC-90201 "Jersey Style!"

  6. #21
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    Talking The resurrector of lost threads

    Let's just bump this and see what happens.
    tmutant

    Founder of the Evil Gamemasters Support Group. No, Really.

  7. #22
    Join Date
    Aug 2000
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    Susanville, CA USA
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    In a group I was playing in about 7 years ago, we had this game using the Hero System which was a melange of Star Wars (lightsabers and psi powers), Star Trek (the basic feel of the paramilitary), and Battlestar Galactica (we were all fighter pilots aboard the USS Roddenberry), our group was made up of....well....

    Doctor, Sadist he always wanted to perform experiments on the people we found.

    Unit Commander, Very Strong he had no compunction of taking the bodies of the fallen foe to use as clubs against his opponents.

    Crack Pilot, nothing unusual about this, but he was played by my 14 year old cousin. When we were confronted by a manual transmission car in a time travel game, we drew the three pedals on a sheet of paper and told him to press the pedals as though his feet were hands. We couldn't stop laughing during that game.

    Hacker, too damned good. That is until he critically fails and instead of turning off the lights in ten-forward, turns off all the power to the entire ship, including gravity control. He also set a replicator in the quarters of the warrior (Klingonesque) felinoid to cycle over and over making kitty litter.

    And then there was the Jeni (Jedi). Something of a cross between a Jedi and a lensman. He had a nasty habit of dying, even with his "jedi powered" force fields and armored skin. He just......I'm sorry, but a resistant defense of 20 should be able to stop a bullet (normally it is). Too bad those enemies were using photon grenades.

  8. #23
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
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    Long ago I ran a D&D game, not advanced D&D, just D&D. We had somehow gotten one of my friends sisters interested in the game and she made a nifty little elven fighter. All went fairly well till they had their first combat.
    Lance:I fire my bow.<dice rolled damage dealt>
    Me:The orc charges you Lori, but he was too far away to get a shot at you. You have one attack, what do you do?
    Lori:<biting lower lip while looking at character sheet>I Chainmail 'im!

    You expect that kinda mistake from someone who never played, but it was the emphatic, wide eyed, "I did good, Yes?" look on her face that set us all laughing our collective butts off.
    Like anyone is actually reading this.

  9. #24
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    Mar 2003
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    Anyone who remembers Thundercats will remember Lion-o and Snarf. One day before I ran a trek episode me and the guys found Thundercat bloopers on the internet and had a wonderful pre-game laugh about them. One of them the guy that does the voice of Lion-o was trying to do a line. He kept coming out of character but the Snarf voice talent stayed completely in character;
    Lion-o;Let's find the mega-condenser...no that's to fast.
    Let's Find the Mega-Condenser...No that's no good.
    Let's find.....Ah ****!
    Snarf;What's wrong Lion-o?
    Lion-o;**** it, there it is again.
    Snarf;What thing?
    Lion-o;That, that thing. That Mega...thing.
    Snarf; Want me ta say it?
    Lion-o; YES!!

    In that game I had just introduced a one shot race that I thought had a fairly simple name. Invalian (In-vahl-yan) was the name. In the same encounter where I introduced the race the Captain tried to order his crew to assist the aliens;
    Franklin;Okay, you two help the...<blank look>
    Reilly;Help who sir?<smile spreading across his face>
    Franklin;You know...those guys those In...somethings..
    Reilly;<perfect Snarf imitation>Want me ta say it?
    Franklin; YES!!

    Game was shut down for a good hour cause we had to reset our poor little brains.
    Like anyone is actually reading this.

  10. #25
    Join Date
    Apr 2000
    Location
    Albertson, NY, USA
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    I have one, And this time it's my flub

    playing Trinity for the 1st time and we in the party are intro'ed to each other.

    of course in the party was a Medic (which would be from the Esculpian [spelling?] order)

    I of course pronounced it Epicapalian!

    and it has been a running joke ever since

  11. #26
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    Dec 2000
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    heath ohio
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    We were playing Cybepunk 2020 . The crew was chasing down a predator based on the moive with Anrold .

    One the Solo ( fighter type ) was in hand to hand combat with the creature . The player was starting to hurt the creature with a other player toss a hand greneade . As I evil game master I ask if she was sure and stated the blast area . The first solo was kicked out of the rest the fight .

  12. #27
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    Aug 2002
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    Kind of a "you had to be there moment". Running a Movie era FASA game, set on a Chandley class frigate. The Captain is in the mess hall, and decides he wants a hotdog. It comes out of the food dispenser with NO MUSTARD. This turns into a running gag. The Chief engineer takes apart the food dispenser, can't find the problem. The CMO tries to determine why the Captain is obsessed with mustard. Finally, enough fooling around, the Romulans show up. The Romulan Captain makes a crack about the PC's ship being the most advanced in the fleet. The Captain begins to rave "Most advanced ship in the fleet? We can't even make a decent hot dog!"

    We fell out laughing, soda was spewed, and role-playing broke down until we got some lunch.
    tmutant

    Founder of the Evil Gamemasters Support Group. No, Really.

  13. #28
    Join Date
    Oct 1999
    Location
    Pittston, PA, USA
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    34

    Oh, you'll love these...

    Okay, first, let me start with two adventures from the old FASA Star Trek days.

    In the first one, I had a friend who wanted to play an Efrosian and decided to take the Tellarite rumor of them being cannibals seriously. We beamed down to a Class M planet and were attacked by a large centipede-type creature and successfully stunned it. Following this, the friend playing the Efrosian scanned it with a tricorder, looked it over, smelled it, then turns to the GM and says "I want to pull a tiny piece off and taste it." Needless to say every head at the table turned to him and asked, "You want to taste it?" "Yeah. I want to know what it tastes like..." Needless to say, the captain ordered him not to eat the new life form.

    The second FASA incident involved a time when I ran the FASA adventure the Strider incident.

    Quick back story: The captain of the Strider orders her patrol into the Klingon Neutral Zone after receiving information that the Federation has declared war of the Klingon Empire. The patrol enters the Neutral Zone and comes upon a Klingon force of D-7 battlecruisers and being outgunned, turns to flee. The two other craft in the patrol are destroyed and the Strider launches the log buoy just before attempting to warp out. The ship goes to warp and the engines' imbalance creates a wormhole that prevents the Klingons from pursuing. The Striders logs are badly damaged and when the Strider returns to the local starbase, the chewed up log in the ship's computer confirms the starbase commander's worst fears: The captain attacked the Klingon Empire on her own authority. So, when the PC's ship goes to the same starbase for repairs, they get caught up in the mystery and decide to steal the Strider (their own ship's warp drive will take weeks to repair), go to the neutral zone and retrieve the log buoy (the only thing that can prove the captain's innocence.) When they get there, they follow the log buoy's signal to an area of empty space. That's when the Klingon BOP decloaks. It found the buoy first. The Klingon captain orders the Strider to surrender (it having illegally entered the Neutral Zone) and the PCs agree. Here's where things go bad. The Klingons beam a boarding party over. They see the PCs' captain has a drawn phaser. The Klingons stun him. One of the PCs in the transporter room decides to beam the Klingons not to the brig, not back to their own ship, but into space! Now the remaining Klingons on board the Bird of Prey are pretty pissed off and beam a photon mine into the Strider's engineering section. Now, not wanting the whole crew to pay for one PCs callousness and in my opinion stupidity, I gave them a chance to beam off the mine which they did directly in front of the BOP's bridge! The BOPs shields were up at this point and we were using FASA's starship tactical combat simulator to run the combat. I decided since the BOP couldn't penetrate the Strider's shields that they would make a retributive strike. Stupid me, because here is where I, myself, screwed up. I blew up the BOP in the same hex as the Strider, which doubled the damage it's self-destruction did, but allowed all SIX shields to absorb the blast so a mere 3 points penetrated to do damage. Had it blown up next to them instead of directly on top, 12 points would have gotten through! Needless to say, they lost the log buoy and were themselves court martialed for their offenses.

    Finally, while running a LUG Star Trek game the same friend who played the Efrosian cannibal was playing a Vulcan who was trying to learn how to ride a horse on the holodeck. Not having much success, he had the "brilliant" idea of trying to MIND MELD with the HOLOGRAPHIC HORSE! Plus, he bombed his mind meld skill test! Not one to pass up a wonderful excuse to run a holodeck gone haywire adventure, I had the mind meld go so far as to infect the entire ship's computer system. When the Vulcan PC slept, the ship's computer shut down. When he woke up, it came back on. Needless to say, they needed to get this fixed quick, which they did by making the Vulcan mind meld with the computer and properly sever the connection. To make matters worse, that player still insists that it could've worked had he had only rolled better (sigh).

  14. #29
    Join Date
    Aug 2002
    Location
    Mount Holly NC
    Posts
    751
    In a Cyberpunk 2020 game I was running, the group was in an office building, trying to gain info about some newtech for their corporate "sponsor". Several Arisaka security goons open fire on them, they duck into an office. One player, a fixer, decides to low-crawl across the hall into another office. 20 feet from Arisaka goon with full-auto shotgun. I rolled, the burst achieved 5 hits, and I asked "What kind of armor are you wearing?"

    His reply, with a quizzical look, "Armor?"

    I said, "Roll a D10. That's the strength for your new character."
    tmutant

    Founder of the Evil Gamemasters Support Group. No, Really.

  15. #30
    'Bout 4 years ago, ADnD2, The party confronts a dragon possessing the party's pet Troglodyte (don't ask, it would take to long), deciding to try and negotiate with him. I forget the build up to how this happened but the Ranger currently leading the group does not like the ultimatum given by the dragon/trog, expressing his displeasure by looking straight at the dragon/trog and saying "Blow Me". The other two PC's, simultaneously look at my and say "I step away from him (the ranger)", the next words out of the player of the ranger is "No good can come of this". He survived, but was not happy about losing he dreadlocks (PS when reading this us a Jamaican accent).

    A few months ago an Andorian security officer (the same player by the way) in our LUG Trek game was trying to stun a criminal fleeing through a crowd of people, I, as the GM, asked what setting his Phaser was on, he paused looked up and said "still on 3...um...wide beam, %#$". Good crowd control...on a new world...the other PC there with him took the now clear shot and thanked the Andorian PC.
    Phoenix...

    "I'm not saying there should be capital punishment for stupidity,
    but maybe we should just remove all the safety lables and let nature take it's course"

    "A Place For Everything & Nothing In It's Place"

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