Wednesday, 23 October 2024

Generating PCs With Lego

You may have been into a Lego shop and noticed a large cabinet containing various buckets filled with character components - heads, bodies, legs, hats, etc. From this, you are allowed to pick-and-mix these components to create up to three unique characters and then take them home with you for an exorbitant price. 

There was a period of time, a few years ago, when we would take my eldest child to the local shopping centre and end up coming home with weird little Lego characters on a fairly regular basis. These many dozens of small plastic people are now housed in a large plastic sack which my kids still regularly play with to this day. 

Some time ago I realised that mixing and matching the components of these figurines was a fun way both to brainstorm D&D PCs (and NPCs for that matter) and also to gain inspiration for general worldbuilding. So, lo! I bring you the Generating PCs With Lego game.

First, you start with a collection of components, and group them into piles of heads, bodies, legs, hats/hair, and accessories. For this demonstration, I've gone for ten of each and arranged them on my electric hob:


Next, you close your eyes and grope around and pick out one component from each pile. You then open your eyes and assemble the results. Hence:


An older woman, wearing a golden mask and wielding a green lightning sword - clearly some sort of fighter-sorceress, perhaps with a grossly disfigured face, or with some mighty and destructive ability which manifests when her mask is revealed.



This one is more of a struggle. A pale-faced clown-like figure in a bikini, with a pet grey cat. I'd call this one something of a dud, but if you have a good idea, say so in the comments.



A cat- or tiger-lady who is accompanied by a dove familiar who enhances her magical abilities, or perhaps acts as a scout or messenger (or a combination of all three). 



Panda-woman wizardress. Need I say more?


It is just slightly possible that we have too many themes going on here. A merman-rabbit accompanied by a chameleon. I suppose one could just about envisage such a PC delving into the Temple of Elemental Evil. But he would considerably slow down the party's overall movement rate.



This woman screams 'ninjress' to me, and the crab-familiar is a nice addition. Picture her hurling her snapping-crab ally into the face of an opponent so it can gouge out his eyes while she gives him a second belly button with her sword. There is, however, a kind of 'Alien Disney Princess' motif creeping into these now; if I did it again I might reconsider the number of animal accessories I include... 



What can I say about this one, except.... alien Disney princess? Although there is a nice Weird Quasi-Egyptian Priestess thing going on here, what with the moons and stars and the giant scorpion ally. Perhaps this character is from the race of aliens who indeed gave the Egyptians their inspiration. 


This one I think can be dealt with more conceptually. The face and body indicate some sort of a court jester - perhaps who has been recently forced into exile. The binoculars indicate deep insight into the true nature of things, as befits such a role. The crown? Maybe theft is the reason for his exile....



A topless woman who goes about distributing poisoned apples - like a fevered admixture of the wicked queen from Snow White, Eve, and a Chris Achilleos painting. 

What I like about this method is that, although obvously Lego figurines are cartoonish, the results don't have to be. A female assassin who has a crab-familiar is a weird but interesting concept, as is a panda-woman sorceress and a golden-masked, grey-haired warrior-mage. 

What I also like about it is that the results each in themselves imply a setting, and indeed can be used as a sort of high-concept setting generation tool in their own right. In what kind of setting would one find a panda-woman sorceress? Or a scorpion priest? Or a tiger-woman with a dove familiar? 

Give it a try. Three mini-figurines are £6 in my local Lego shop, so you only need to shell out a mere £60 to get going...

10 comments:

  1. Advanced Fighting Fantasy 2E covers all your bases when statting up any of these awesome PCs! :-)

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    1. More straightforwardly than, say, GURPS?

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    2. Absolutely. Take Panda Girl, in AFF she'd be a Bhorket (bamboo-eating ape/bear hybrid), plus apply a Wizard template, with the Focus talent (embodied by her crystal star wand), and the random name generator, and you've got: Cha Takvic, Bhorket Wizard, SKILL 8 STAMINA 11, Attacks 2 (Small Claw), MAGIC 7, Magic Points 14, Focus Wand (improvised), Skills: Herb Lore plus others. Put 35 more of those together and you have a ready to print Troika! chapbook. :-)

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  2. Fun exercise, provided that you do not need to buy the lego!

    The cat woman is clearly some sort of witch/warlock character, cat familiar, pact with a demon etc. The bikini is a nod to current dungeon punk art.

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    1. Yeah, pact with a demon makes sense....

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  3. Bikini cat woman in a sunhat is clearly ready for the beach, so she's likely the ambassador from the cat-worshipping people of one of the interior nations, posted to the mildly hedonistic beach-dwelling civilization. On her trousers she wears a full set of the bloodied stripes of experience, as her age and service to the nation permit, and her face is painted as befits a person of her sex and class, but otherwise she wears clothing appropriate to the climate and the lazy good-times environment of the host nation. Find her at the open beach hut that serves as the impromptu embassy for her people, where she sips pina coladas and hides the sacred cat's droppings in the sand when no-one is looking. Loyal cat-worshippers might find that she has a few requests for them, regarding the trade in barbecued shrimp and the rise of the cult of volleyball.

    Possibly rabbit-eared merman is another foreign dignitary, representing the tribes who worship the sea-chameleon.

    Cats and sea-chameleons, naturally, don't get along. In contrast to the poolside deckchairs of the local royal court, relationships aren't warm.

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    1. This is what you call entering into the spirit of things!

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  4. The second one is a street performer/cat burglar. The cat is trained to participate in her performances and to act as scout/accomplice in her heists.

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    1. Nice. This could be a book of short stories.

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  5. Figure 2 is clearly the fighter lady in the Jeff Easley chestnut "Cutting Things Down to Size" (http://dndppf.blogspot.com/2014/06/friday-art-gallery-iii_27.html). She is involved in some kind of caper and is doing her best to look inconspicuous (she's more of a direct-action type and might not quite have chosen proper approach to her makeup). It's not a cat though, it's a miniature displacer beast. All the tentacles broke off in the bin.

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