I'm excited to be considered for a fun and exciting campaign.A perfect situation would be to play D&D on Saturday mornings (EST) Ideally, I am looking for a Tuesday or Thursday night game (EST) that does not go past midnight. Those evenings would work great because I work from home on Fridays, so I could play to about midnight without any problems. Other times on Saturday or Sunday may work, it would depend on the details. Other days/times MAY work, but it would depend on the details. I am looking to play a Fighter/Warlock, starting with 1 level in Fighter and then the rest in Warlock (maybe going up to Fighter 3 eventually, though). The character would be a Half-Elf fighter who had his family and friends killed in a demonic ritual. This leads the Chaotic Good half-elf fighter to make a pact with an arch-demon in to the Warlock class, vowing to use the demonic hell-powers against the evil practitioners in this plane. The arch-demon was mostly amused by this and granted the pact for its own mysterious purposes. He'd eventually go Pact of the Blade. You can think of the character as a riff off of Constantine, as a demonic investigator/fighter. I am hoping in any campaign that a melee/caster character will fit right in. My plan is to have a mix of melee combat with a great axe and using eldritch blast and other spells at range. The character would also lean on a mix on combat/investigation oriented invocations and spells. Alternatively, if uncommon races and/or multi-classing are not allowed, I could envision the same background for the character, but as a Mountain Dwarf and as a straight-up Warlock. The character would just be flavored with more Scottish-sounding Dwarven rage. He'd wield a battle axe 2 handed until he was able to summon a great axe with his Pact of the Blade powers. If somehow that role was taken, I could even see playing the (dreaded?) cleric. 5E looks to have made some interesting tweaks to make clerics an interesting class to play. I could see a Life, Light, or War priest as especially fun to play. I am 37 years old, I live in Indianapolis. I played mostly 2nd edition (AD&D before that) when I was a teenager into my college years, before everyone started having real life issues and meeting up for regular gaming we just impossible. I was the guy who knew most of the rules off of the top of my head because I'd read the books and found the memorization pretty easy, or I at least knew where to quickly look something up. I have seen 3rd edition, but was a bit turned off by how much more complicated the game started to get. I have been catching up on the new 5th edition and am really excited for the new system. I have a players handbook, and have been obsessing over it for over 2 weeks. I'd be nice to get a bit of the old nostalgia going, but with new friends. Some questions for DMs: - Are uncommon races (half-elf) allowed? - Is multi-classing allowed? - Are feats allowed? - How are we communicating? My preference is a voice chat like Teamspeak, etc. I have a working mic and all that. I think I'd be willing to set up Skype on my Kindle if that was a must. - What is the general age range of the group? Nothing is completely out of bounds, but some teen-aged people are so good at grating on my nerves, and not even on purpose. - How focused is the playing and combat on a grid-system and precise movement? I think I'd be more interested if it is a bit more theatre of the mind and/or allowing movement and combat to flow normally if it seems reasonable without busting out a ruler every round. I also like when we can use maps or draw a rough map to see where PCs and monsters and obstacles are, though. - How much RPing is there? Having to listen people (trying to) speak in a crazy voice as their character may just be too much for me, but I like exploring how we think our characters would behave and react. On the RP-light side, though, I do not have the temperament for people who want to play a meta-game with their characters and are only 100% combat focused. If if sounds like I would be a good fit for your comapaign, I'd look forward to hearing back from you. Best, Aaron S.