| Harlock |
Not so much a running gag as a walking joke was one of the players in a Dark Sun campaign I ran in college. His first character was an elven preserver/thief/cleric of air who was generally a selfish so-and-so who was out for number one...except on those occasions when he would suddenly remember that he was a cleric, by golly, and would ask "may I help you, my son?" We started calling him the MPD elf. Well, he lost his character sheet, so he switched to one of the backups on his character tree.
This was the half-giant fighter. Now I have no complaints about the job he did imitating his chosen...umm...imprintee? Is that a word? Anyway, the problem I had with his behavior is that he decided to imprint on the one character (the defiler) who was doing his darnedest to _avoid_ attention! Well, he lost his character sheet, so he switched to one of the backups on his character tree.
This was the human rogue with a 20 strength and more daggers than Hanse Shadowspawn. Who encountered the party at a little after midnight in the back alleys of Tyr. Who proceeded to shadow one of the PCs, but didn't bother with the hide/move silently rolls, so he was noticed by the Nightwatch. Who, in the ensuing conversation, insisted that he was carrying all the daggers because he was afraid for his life in this lawless part of the city (mind you, the guy's built like a brick wall...comes from having a 20 strength, don'cha know) and generally carried on in such pitifully inept fashion that he had one of the other players literally rolling on the floor laughing. The Nightwatch let him go because they figured anybody _that_ dumb couldn't be a _successful_ thief. Well, he lost his character sheet, so he switched to one of the backups on his character tree. (Are we beginning to see a pattern, here?)
This was Bernice, the cleric of fire. It should be noted that I'm almost sure Bernice wasn't originally on his character tree, and I'm pretty sure the thief wasn't, either. From what I remember, all four of the original character tree had been lost by the time knife boy was created. At any rate, Bernice was a gender-bender who was played so incredibly gender-neutrally that we nicknamed her Bernie and kept calling her "him." He probably would've lost that character sheet, too, if the school year hadn't ended, ending the campaign.