In Ye Olden Days, DMs wouldn’t necessarily insist on people making new characters for every campaign. If you’ve kept the sheet you might find a DM willing to let Chad Thundercock finally have his time.
Fun fact: the y in “ye” when used as a definite article is actually a thorn: þ and still pronounced as “th.” This is from the character y being used as a replacement for þ in early printable typesets that did not include it. The unrelated second person plural pronoun “ge” also became “ye” and the two became confused in common usage. So, if you ever hear someone say “yee olde …” or similar instead of “thee olde …”, please remember how I’m a smug, self-satisfied bastard.
In Ye Olden Days, DMs wouldn’t necessarily insist on people making new characters for every campaign. If you’ve kept the sheet you might find a DM willing to let Chad Thundercock finally have his time.
Fun fact: the y in “ye” when used as a definite article is actually a thorn: þ and still pronounced as “th.” This is from the character y being used as a replacement for þ in early printable typesets that did not include it. The unrelated second person plural pronoun “ge” also became “ye” and the two became confused in common usage. So, if you ever hear someone say “yee olde …” or similar instead of “thee olde …”, please remember how I’m a smug, self-satisfied bastard.
It’s Chief Thundercock tyvm.