Why are assassins character and, in general, everything related to professional assassins (organization of assassins...

Why are assassins character and, in general, everything related to professional assassins (organization of assassins, etc...), so appealing in RPG or even in fictions in general ?

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Because it's cool

99% of an adventurer's problems can be solved by killing someone.

The remaining 1% can only be solved by killing everyone.

They're typically characterized as highly skilled lone wolves with access to a secret enclave that provides rare goods and services to further their primary business of murdering things.

Because killing someone and doing so in a way that is clever and smart is both a physical power trip and an intellectual one. You've outsmarted the target, they will never see you coming, and then bam, you get the kill and get away with it too.

because there are so many ways to play them.

for example, this...
suptg.thisisnotatrueending.com/archive/22021634/
...is too subtle for many, but satisfying if you play it true to form.

They have clear structure and goals which makes it easy to frame a story about them. They also tend to work alone or in small groups which allows you to focus on a small number of characters. Lastly they tend to operate as part of a secret underground which operates on deception which gives the audience the chance to try and understand it and then feel good when they figure something out about the situation before a character does.

Basically as a premise it has in-built motivation, stakes, conflict, and intrigue.

007

Because in fiction they're always shown as the suave cool types who are experts in all forms of close combat and with all weapons and always get their marks. Even when things go wrong, which they rarely do, they are just good enough to get out of trouble and finish the job anyway.

Literally "pshh, nothin personal kid" the character concept.

Not assassin per se. He has "license to kill", but in his line of work enemy taken captive is worth more than enemy eliminated.

An assassin represents freedom. He goes where he wants, when he wants.

yet most "professional assassins" have a code, law or religion that makes them who they are and reduces their freedom.

you forgot a sense of professionalism

Its got a bunch of power fantasy angles, chances are at least one of them will be appealing. Being better at violence than everyone else, being structurally sanctioned and supported by capital while getting to do what you want, being free from reprisal, having a secret club that makes you feel more sophisticated than the other criminals and barbarians, etc.. You get to be a badboy outside the rules and still have all the nice things that come with rules.

Its pretty much for smug cunts who want think they're special. Lots of those.

Because in the context of RPGs, assassins are generally doing cool and mostly justified stuff like killing political figures, military leaders, etc. You don't really see the 90% of actual assassin work that usually involves getting paid to kill innocent normies.

It's easy to root for the guy lining up a shot to snipe wizard-Hitler from a rooftop. It's harder to root for him when the mob is paying him to kill the neighborhood deli owner for not paying them protection money.

You're basically the better sort of Murderhobo.

Single target DPS

Technically that's more accurate. "Assassins" target political figures, if you kill normal people you're a "hitman" (or a serial killer).

I don't like 'em. I prefer the "pragmatist survivor" archetype over anything else.

I don't know what to tell you OP, they aren't appealing at all. You can tell a person has shit taste if they enjoy that sort of thing

it's a story about a consummate professional who could die if they're discovered doing their job but whose impact can save or destroy entire nations.

its a thrill-seeker's staple character design.

I'm losing my shit reading about Oinkbane. I'm stealing the hell out of him.

DOO EET FAGGOT

Because they fully represent an aspect of humanity that a lot of people often think about but never really engage with. It's appealing to try it out in a controlled and safe environment, like a game.

because you can play an asshole but still be an honourable asshole and a good guy.

Edgelords like power fantasies.

You guys are reddit-tier fags.

The romantic notions of nietzcheism has led us to fetishize people who control the balance of life and death.

We see in murderers a nihilistic form of the ubermenschean ideal.

>assassins
>not sellswords
>in the year of our lord

muh edge

Because they are almost universally viewed as solo badasses.

...you must be allergic to fun...

Professionals are best.

1. For the same reason secret agents, spies, and special forces are appealing. They move above and outside normal society, carrying out special tasks that only they could complete. "Elite" is a glamorous word.

2. They are dangerous in a hidden fashion, and expected to be subtle and sophisticated. You can imagine an assassin sipping expensive whisky in a dimly lit hotel bar. The boisterous fighter doesn't fit in there quite so well.

3. An assassin can kill a lot of people without it seeming brutish or random, which appeals to edgelords in denial, just like zombie apocalypses do.

4. The idea of being able to take a life, especially a valuable and well-guarded one, and get away with it is a high octane power fantasy.

Because of these facts, and the oversaturation of edgy, badass pro killers in fiction, it has become difficult to use these characters in a satisfying manner. It can be done, though. I have personally GM'd two assassin-themed campaigns, and I had to sit down with the players ahead of both because they were all, without exception, making Coldsteel the Hedgehog with backstories of varying degrees of trauma.