Wait, what the heck is a âTabletop RPGâ ?
Thatâs a good question.
Well let me put on my glasses and give you a definition I find clear enough
In my humble opinion, of course.
A tabletop roleplaying game is, in a way, a kind of board game (even though a board isnât always needed). But unlike a board game, it doesnât have a real end and usually give the players great freedom in how to play, being mixed with theatrical improvisation. Also, unlike a great number of games, itâs not a competition between players*.
A tabletop rpg is usually played around a table (or using a vocal/visual chat), with 2 to 6 players most of the time, and a Storyteller (or Game Master/Dungeon Master, GM/DM for short), whoâll run the game and make sure everything goes well (or tries, at least).
The objective wonât be to âwin the gameâ here, but to get to the end of a story told by the DM, in which the players will act as characters of their choice. The players are entirely free to make their characters do as they please, given what they want to do is actually something their character can do (a character without wings wonât be able to fly, for example).
The Game Master, while narrating everything that happens, will also describe the consequences of the playerâs characters actions, and will embody every character the players arenât playing.Â
The characters played by the DM are called Non-Playable Characters, or NPC.
The sessions played by the players and the Storyteller are usually called Adventures or Scenarios, and what happens during these stories have to be prepared or broadly known by the DM, but not the players.
It can be noted that, unlike most board games, the players can keep their characters from one Adventure to the next, and make them change and grow the more the stories continue.
A big story, one that can span on multiple Adventures, is usually called a Campain, and depending on the players and the Game Master, its length can vary greatly.
*Ok, ânot a competitionâ isnât completely true... it depends A LOT of other players and the GM. But most of the time, this kind of game is much more fun if played cooperatively.