>DM sets up a mini-campaign for about a month's worth of sessions, where we all play fictional versions of ourselves with classes (think the D&D cartoon)
>DM & I are university-trained actors from the same facility; my speciality was/is comedic acting, monologue and vocal performances at volume with a massive, booming voice - the DM was my director for many pieces in our old amateur theatre company
>I'm physically the largest and strongest of the group, so I pick Cleric and choose to tank
>As we're rolling up ourselves and looking up skills, I jokingly ask my DM if I can get 1d4 AoE force damage if I bellow at my enemies whilst using Prestidigitation to amplify it to three times its normal volume
>DM looks at me curiously for a few seconds, and then agrees
>End up using this as an emergency weapon to great effect in all the sessions in this mini-campaign
Who was in the wrong here?
>>51475812
No one?
>>51475812
Was someone necessarily in the wrong?
I don't see it
>>51475812
No one? If no one takes offense to anything, no one did anything wrong. Thanks for telling a story though I guess.
>>51475840
>>51475856
>>51475871
In retrospect I'm a mite worried that I abused what started out as a joke power. I only used it once per session, but hitting everything around you for 1d4 just by shouting is pretty grim on the opposition, and I know that joke abilities like this give some people conniptions.
>>51475812
Nobody did anything wrong, that sounds like a lot of fun!
>>51476355
...not really? It's 1d4 damage. Like, unless you're doing a whole campaign at level one it's not powerful at all. DM is fun for allowing it.