[RPG] Tips on playing a character whose goals run contrary to his outward actions (to the other PCs)

character-developmentsystem-agnostic

So, in one of the previous campaigns I played, I had a character whose own personal goals often ended up at odds with the rest of the party (who all agreed with each other). It was difficult to figure out how to try and complete those goals without everyone else wanting to beat my character senseless.

So I'm asking for ideas – what are some good ways for a character to achieve their goals when they run contrary to what the entire rest of the part wants?

Some examples of situations I'd like this to be applicable to:

  • A fighter is accepting payment/bribes from a third party, who wants the target of a rescue mission dead.
  • A druid who wants to stop the party from taking some action, due to prior experience. (Ex: We nearly set a forest on fire once. How would that druid discreetly prevent the group from taking similar actions, even though they all want to because it pays very well?)
  • A rogue who wants that universe's equivalent of the One Ring for themselves. (Yeah, I just saw The Hobbit. Shaddap.)

And so on…


EDIT: I figured that the alternative goal would pretty much always be known to the other players, but the methods used to achieve it would not be. I am generally against betrayal as well, and prefer the other players to at least know that this is a possibility. Failure out of left field is not fun.

My second example is pretty explicit in that even the characters know about this alternative goal, and would (presumably) assume that your character is just going along with them for the time being.


My original example that spawned this question was from DnD 3.5e, a Lawful Evil Cleric + Undetectable Alignment every single day + high Bluff, who rather failed in his subversive tactics, largely due to a lack of imagination on my part and general inexperience with RPGs. The other characters did not know his alignment, although out-of-character the players did.

Best Answer

First ensure group buy-in.

If anyone in the real-life group is unhappy about this, ditch the idea. Talk it out and see if there's something they're worried about that you can reassure them on, but this isn't worth a real-life schism.

Make sure you're in the right game.

D&D would have a hard time supporting this without eventually shafting someone. Paranoia is based on this concept. The Fate system could handle it nicely. Find a game system that will support your idea.

Have a goal.

Work with your GM (and your group) to come up with a coherent achievement that is your character's ulterior goal, so you have something to work toward. Otherwise you'll just be picking their pockets or licking their spoons or something.

Don't target another PC.

Your goal should encompass the entire group, or be unrelated to any of them and instead concerned with their actions. If you single out one character as the target of your secret life, either that PC's player will be unhappy or the rest of the group will be.

Be prepared for failure.

If the rest of the party legitimately catches you in-character, that's a great story: they rooted out the cause of their troubles and that's a win that you as a player helped make possible. Kudos all around, and when they discover your clandestine goal it'll probably bring in new story elements.

Celebrate with the group when they foil your plans: You're part of the group too.

Be prepared for success.

The party may be perceptive as a bag of rocks and your plan (sheer elegance in its simplicity) comes off without a hitch. Now what? Your goal shouldn't be a win condition like "kill the party." It should either be an ongoing thing (eg your druid example above; keeping the average party's collateral damage in check is a full-time job) or a means to an end (the fighter who wants the target of the rescue mission to die must have a reason, or his employer does; what happens after? Why was it important?).

Make the group happy you succeeded: Their story progresses! Interesting plots are afoot! They have things to do, places to go, people to shake down and villains to defeat!

Your next character helps the party.

To smooth over any potential hard feelings, I suggest that whatever the outcome, once your PC is no longer in the party (goal achieved, found out, etc), your next PC should be very much a team player who helps as they try to undo whatever damage your previous PC may have done.