I saw your Hamlet D&D comic on display at the McNay art museum in Texas as part of a "Designing Shakespeare" exhibit, it was so surreal
OH MY GOODNESS WHAT
I'm stunned they found that worth exhibiting ;0;
On the one hand I'm a little annoyed they didn't tell me but also. If anyone has pictures I'd like to see it 👀
Hamlet as a D&D character + concept art and his avenging angel form!
@thehoodratprince @caligulnah @feelstown (thank you!) @oldmanyellsatcloud (YES. I love this idea!) @ladywyl (this ask has been in my inbox for the longest time, sorry about that)
Thanks for the positive feedback on the D&D Hamlet comic, guys! When I posted it, I didn’t expect other people would like it as much as I did! :,D
Just recently, I got the opportunity to play as him in a one-shot. Just a couple things about him:
The stats above are standard array, so it’s not too arbitrary. Hamlet is notoriously complex and subject to interpretation, so others might handle his ability scores differently.
Part of me wants to make his CON higher considering how long he lasted in Act V after getting stabbed with a poisoned sword.
Hamlet being DEX-based actually works pretty well, since he can use rapiers and daggers.
The spells he knows include Protection from Evil and Good, Sleep, Protection from Poison, and Zone of Truth.
He multiclassed in wizard (at least, in the one-shot) partially because I didn’t want to waste his INT stat. He was a scholar, after all.
Edit (5/31/20): Alright, so some have commented that he can’t multiclass unless he has 13 STR and 13 CHA. For the sake of simplicity I used standard array for the pic, but in-game his charisma stat is a bit higher (racial traits considered). As for the -1 strength... Nah, I stand by it, man. When he said he’s not Hercules in Act I, I believe him. :P
Okay, to be honest, I didn't once consider Hamlet as a paladin, but the more I thought about it the more it got interesting.
Hamlet is hardly as "warlike" as his father. The armor he inherits fits awkwardly or is too heavy for him to wear comfortably. Making an effective paladin in D&D usually means prioritizing the strength ability score over intelligence, yet the latter is one of Hamlet's most notable characteristics; he uses his wit as his primary weapon.
His being a paladin does align, however, with his tendency to be moral (even though he sometimes absolutely isn’t, walking mass of contradictions that he is). His line "heaven hath pleased it so/ to punish me with this and this with me,/ that I must be their scourge and minister" makes the class work, in a way.
It's not a role cut out for him, but he still does his best to set things right in "rotten" Denmark and I think that's neat.