In papergaming, players can look at a character sheet of their own creation and see all of their skills, right there, in black and white.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Players are artists who create their own reality within the game.
The reality, for me at least, is that the finest recreation of a paper game, played on computer, pales in comparison with the actual, face-to-face experience.
Basically, the way you get into any role is just doing research on the type of character you're playing.
I tend to play characters that aren't supposed to black or written black.
Most authors would love to see their characters made for the screen, especially one that's quite colourful.
Every character a writer creates has some of themselves in it somewhere.
I sometimes think that what I do as a writer is make a kind of colouring book, where all the lines are there, and then you put in the colour.
In the animation world, people who understand pencils and paper usually aren't computer people, and the computer people usually aren't the artistic people, so they always stand on opposite sides of the line.
The writer creates the role on the page and then the actor takes it and makes it their own.
To create characters, one must build background. And one of the tools we use is improvisation.