So I was toying around with a character on D&D Beyond last night and came up with a gold dragonborn artificer charlatan who'll distract you with wonders and fascinations and charm you with his wit while picking your pocket. Or swapping that real diamond with a fake one. Or planting something incriminating on you. Or whatever else charlatans do while distracting you. Oh hey, look at the time! Must not tarry! Toodloo! Been wanting to try out artificer but finding games is difficult for me. I can play during the day during the week, usually between about 10am and 4pm; after that, I have to start getting supper ready and evenings have distractions that would slow down the games. Weekends are unpredictable; I might be able to play, but I might not. It's kind of the reverse of most people, who seem to favor evenings and weekends due to life. I'm in PST, by the way. I have just enough experience with D&D to get myself into trouble, as they say. I played a wee bit of 3.5 way back when but I've mostly played 5e via Westmarch. The problem is that I'd like to get into a campaign, something I can RP through regularly; that way, I could get more comfortable with people and RPing via D&D and actually get invested in the characters I create beyond the mechanics. I'm bi, so lgbt-friendly games are a must; I don't mind romance if it develops naturally within a game, but I prefer to fade to black if things get too hot and heavy; I have a phobia of bees, so please avoid extensive or in-depth descriptions thereof. Um...I'm 37 and male, if that matters...not sure what else to put into this. You can send me a message on here if you want to see my sheet on D&DB or exchange Discord names. Like I said, I do have a character made; I used point buy for the stats but I can certainly rework that and the stat bonuses. I also haven't put in the starting inventory or gold, as he's obviously not in a game yet. I'm obviously a player looking to join a game, but I prefer smaller groups; larger ones can get hectic and make turns take forever. Around for or five people is usually best for a game, I've found, maybe six at most?