It is a really cool story, but I too disbelieve it although I’ll admit it’s possible—it needs more details.
Any LARP I’ve been to, I’d think the padded-stick swords and calls of “2 [damage]” and the ‘monsters’ consisting of people in masks would be a giveaway that something’s up, even if there was a big stigma against breaking character and the RPers all thought the wedding guests were in on it.
Also if I didn’t know about LARPs and somehow became convinced I was in a magical land I’d want to see some magic, and since mages were a PC class there would be some around. I’d become suspicious when they threw beanbags or declared they’d made a force wall that I could walk right through. Maybe the guests had other priorities, though...
You’ve probably only been to American LARPs. European ones, particularly in Scandinavia, are much more serious about things, and use minimize the unbelievable aspects. So the people playing skilled warriors are actually skilled warriors, the armor is more or less real armor, and the weapons are real (though unsharpened) weapons.
Even in the US, long-runner LARPs (generally run in periodic several-day sessions, with a consistent cast of characters who persist from session to session) tend to be along those lines as well.
Did a post ever get made of this?
It is a really cool story, but I too disbelieve it although I’ll admit it’s possible—it needs more details. Any LARP I’ve been to, I’d think the padded-stick swords and calls of “2 [damage]” and the ‘monsters’ consisting of people in masks would be a giveaway that something’s up, even if there was a big stigma against breaking character and the RPers all thought the wedding guests were in on it.
Also if I didn’t know about LARPs and somehow became convinced I was in a magical land I’d want to see some magic, and since mages were a PC class there would be some around. I’d become suspicious when they threw beanbags or declared they’d made a force wall that I could walk right through. Maybe the guests had other priorities, though...
You’ve probably only been to American LARPs. European ones, particularly in Scandinavia, are much more serious about things, and use minimize the unbelievable aspects. So the people playing skilled warriors are actually skilled warriors, the armor is more or less real armor, and the weapons are real (though unsharpened) weapons.
Even in the US, long-runner LARPs (generally run in periodic several-day sessions, with a consistent cast of characters who persist from session to session) tend to be along those lines as well.