Have any of your characters gotten married over the course of a campaign?

Have any of your characters gotten married over the course of a campaign?

Nope.

One is angling to, probably. None yet that I can recall though.

Yep.

Yep. She's a half-elf and with his first born in the oven. Cash as fuck/10 ma nigga.

I've posted about the circumstances of their meeting, romance, and marriage before. I'd really only do it again of people desperately wanted to hear about it.

S'bout it.

No.

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Oh, perhaps you want a bit more content in your thread? Play along next time you make a thread.

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Alright, one of my teammates got married in game. She played a Kislevit ice witch, which in our gms headcannon made her a sort of noble. She got into a political marriage into the family of a well liked Altdorf noble lord.

Source?

Yeah.

Human barbarian married a maiden she saved near the beginning of the campaign.

The maiden was a constant assistant through the story. She taught the barbarian how to write and read. Was cute.

>maiden she saved

>maiden
>she

Disgusting

Yes
he was a Paladin that eventually feel and became a champion of the god of Dragons and Tyranny and was married to a Cleric of the goddess of peace

No, roleplaying romance doesn't interest me.

No. I might rectify this now that you mentioned it.

Sadly, no. There was a medusa waifu that I wanna gun for later in my current campaign, though.

>not showing a sheltered city girl all the possibilities of girl love.
You disgust me.

Yep. Arcane archer in a homebrew Bloodborne-lite setting. Part of a group of demon hunters outlawed by the Cadre (religion/government). The group had an r&r stop at a library. Shielded by a librarian who had her fair share of things to hide from the Cadre.

He ended up with her. Later finds out she's a scholar who (in the past) impregnated herself with the embryo of transitional being (demon god, essentially). It was still born, but ended up making said librarian part transitional. She's essentially a demi-god with mad pyromancy abilities.

Our last session revealed that she was pregnant. Goddamn, I was looking forward to seeing if my character's wife was going to have a quasi-demon god kid.

A few times yeah. Most notable would be, once to an evil dragon as a peaceable gesture of goodwill, once to the BBEG sort of out of necessity, and once to an undead as part of a ritual (pretty much Corpse Bride).

Fucking heresy

Gochuumon

Two other player characters (Pretty much the Prince, and his bride) had a massive, extravagant ceremony near the end of the game... Cue undead army breaking the door down and attacking.

It was all a ruse to draw the (Suspected-to-be-dead) BBEG out, and he walked right into the trap. Since I was the Cleric, I got to be the Officiant. Elven Wizard was mixing drinks, Orccish Berserker was carrying wine in and out of the building, and it turned into a massive brawl shortly afterwards. Most fun ending of a campaign I've had.

Political marriage, and they absolutely despise one another.

He's an amiable lordling who hates the system and only participates because he needs the inheritance to pull off his plan of collapsing it, she's a social butterfly and a calculating political climber who has backstabbed her way into the good graces of the nobility. She also has some vaguely ominous goal, but I have yet to find out what it is.

They spend essentially all of their time together being intensely sarcastic and bitter. Neither one knows the other's goals, but they both suspect that something is up and so they dance around each other and try to investigate without giving the game away.

Incidentally how he knows that she's screwing her maid on the side.

Don't ever talk to me or my quarter-god son again.

One of them somehow managed to get a demi-god to fall in love with him.
They ended up getting married and end up with a son after a time skip.
His wife ends up sacrificing herself to save my character from the BBEG though, and his son was there to watch his mother get eaten alive.
The son ends up blaming my character for being too weak to properly protect his mother, and runs away from home on a quest to become strong enough to avenge his mother.
The party eventually managed to get to the BBEG, only to see my character's son kill it just as we get there. Thing is, we were planning on sealing it instead of killing it because when the BBEG dies, its power and crazy murderlust end up transferring to whoever killed it, and since the son was already powerful and full of crazy murderlust, everything went downhill pretty damn fast.
The very end of the game was basically the party ganging up on the son after sealing didn't work but they found a way to negate the power/insanity transfer, with my character dealing the final blow. His son spent his last moments shouting about how much he hates his father and how he blames him for everything.

Felt bad, man. Felt real bad.

Well my human chaotic neutral sun-monk kinda captured and enslaved a drow matron that was previously his owner.

Spawned a half-elf from this union and has been a doting father on his of time.

My paladin got hitched to the party cleric after spending several in-game years figuring out a way to bring her back when she died a few sessions into the group's first campaign together (we were super low-level and any way to revive or preserve her just wasn't on the table; a fairly cheap magical item was released later that would have solved the situation, but wasn't available at the time.). Since then, I have been GMing pretty much exclusively so I've never had another character get to the end of a campaign because something always makes people drop their campaign and ask me to do one again.

So far in my campaigns I've had a party sorceress decide the handsome sailor NPC I made up on the fly to give the group a ride to a pirate fight was interesting, which ended up with him becoming a regular NPC and getting married to the sorceress. Then in the next campaign the party ranger eventually married her childhood friend after the whole big subplot with her doomed hometown getting ravaged and the survivors sold into slavery was resolved.

Well now I'm interested, lay it on us user.

When it mattered to the game, one as a political marriage to a horse lady ruler of the animal people. The other one my character and the goddess he worshipped were punished by the gods and forcibly joined both physically and spiritually by marriage and a divine tether. It had some pretty disturbing magical realm results down the road.

Nope, but he had one intimate moment with female antagonists.
And now she's with him constantly, keeps nagging, gets jealous of other women and occasionally literally takes control of his life and spends his money on useless shit.
Diablerie, not even once.

One of my players accidently got hitched to an ancient Dwarven Matron by giving her a magic ring.

Yup. Down on his luck xia won a martial contest expecting a cash reward, instead he got a Mongol waifu with ice kung-fu. He's still broke but at least he isn't lonely.

Yeah, I desperately wanna hear about this.

He was a legendary elven hero

She was a magical talking sword

They got married and retired to an abandoned monastery in the mountains, where he spent the next several centuries contemplating the meaning of the phrase 'blue balls'.

Not married, but my human cleric has a kid by a fellow orphan, a drow of roughly equivalent maturity(he's 18, she's 90). They've got a kid, two years old, and he's out adventuring to try to keep the empire from slipping into civil war. Also looking for a way to extend his life so that he can spend as much time as possible with "his girls", without going the evil lichdom route, as he wants his daughter to have a better life than he and her mom had.
Before getting taken into the orphanage, they both had to do some less than savory things to survive.

Yep. Married a dragon and ended up playing as my kid in a later campaign.

She started off as a clutz of a priestess that showed up at the party's fortress, would pout and drink tea when she got mad, and no one knew she was a dragon until after my cleric shagged her and she somehow turned back into a dragon in her sleep. She wasn't a very big dragon yet so the only casualty was the bed and some general awkwardness for a few days afterwards.

Bard wanted to know why the bed broke and he didn't seem to buy the explanation that we'd just been going at it that hard.

chino-chan wa ore no yome

The best

okay, i'll settle for imouto

7th sea couldn't let an arc go by without marriage coming up in some way

Character I'm playing right now is engaged to the new empress of not!Japan, so soon.

Weaponize seduction man.
Disarm her by having her come home one day to a really, really good meal and a charming husband who plans to take her out for a night on the town.

She'll totally suspect you have something planned and thus spend time working out your new plan rather than investigating your current shit.

Yea I married into one of the high houses in the city my trading company was based in. If I hadn't, I pretty much would have been blocked from selling anything, or the priestesses would have just shown up and demanded things for nothing. I deal with logistics, she deals with politics. As far as drow marriages go, it's pretty cozy.

The only thing I'm married to is powergaming, baby!
I divorced the hell out of roleplaying.

Who /marriedtogelatinouscubes/ here?

I'm in one campaign where the characters are all from the same clan and there have been a few political marriages.

...Plus one guy who plays a womanizer who got one political marriage to seal an alliance and then seduced a virgin girl from another clan and got her pregnant so he had to marry her as well to salvage our relations with her clan (the rest of the characters did not appreciate having the clan relations nearly ruined because one guy couldn't keep his dick in his pantaloons for a few days.) and then he got a third wife (well a mistress actually) just because he could...

Three characters have gotten married in the campaign specifically.

One lady who married her lifetime friend in an overly elaborate illusion trap she was in. The trap would only release her on 'death' and the party realised the trap wouldn't care if it was the victim's real or illusioned death.
So she lived sixty years of her life in an instant, marrying her sweetheart and growing old together and as they were slowly walking along a beach, hand in hand did she realise she never actually saved the world. This coupled with the party trying to break the trap on the outside led to her seeing the world come to an end, at which point the trap decided she was dead and released her.
The party has had to place a mental block on her memories of inside the illusion just to keep her from falling into depression.

A Lady Knight who was betrothed without permission to another lady who was rather important in the upper levels of government for mostly political reasons.
In response she packed up and left to 'go on a pilgrimage of self discovery'.
Since then she's been married In Absentia.
She doesn't hate the lady exactly, but personal issues that run deep between them means she can't stand for the marriage. When she finally returns to the kingdom she'll probably just continue to avoid her and volunteer for any duties that'll take her away from the castle and city.

Jokes on her though, her wife is getting ready to join her and the party to see if she can try to reach a common ground that isn't several leagues away.

Another lady is from a society where marriage is largely different and mostly governs legal and financial issues.
She has married two other members of the party before they first all left their home as an obvious sign of loyalty and commitment between the three of them and has remained a defining point of their relationship together.
No, this isn't just one big lesbian menage a trois. Whilst they are intimate with each other, it's platonic.

>in the campaign
in their campaigns.
Sorry, these have been three seperate campaigns.

Sleep tight, pizza-pie

Yeah, but then he became the BBEG pretty much immediately afterwards.

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No, only at the end when we all describe whatever happily ever after scenario we come up for our characters. Typically my dudes end up with princesses of some kind.