
Spoiler Alert: This story contains the destroyer of "Dimension 20: Cloudward, Ho!" episode 1. Now streaming when you drop out.
As a regular actor of "Dimension 20" (aka "Intrepid Heroes"), Lou Wilson plays everything from mechanical engineers to dirty wood p. However, "D20" fans have encountered the new Lou Wilson player character (PC) in "Dimension 20: Cloudward, Ho!" for the first time in nearly three years. This hit independent streaming dropouts.
The new series, which paid just days after “Dimension 20's” live show at the Hollywood Bowl, is an Indiana Jones-meets-Jules Verne-style adventure installment of the role-playing game TV show that follows the crew of an airship as they “Join forces and take to the skies in search of the missing Professor Comfrey MacLeod, (venturing) off to a fantastical world of machine wonders and perils known as gat.”
Before the premiere of “Dimension 20: Bowl Battle” live performance and “Dimension 20: Cloudward, Ho!” type About the historical figures who inspired his new character, whether he wants to perform live for the "Dimension 20" season DM or not.
“On the actor side, we were very excited about the idea of returning to the spot where we found it,” Wilson said. “We love going back to the season because we were able to develop old debris to allow us to bring ourselves into the way of art form.
Wilson, his fellow heroes (Emily Axford), Ally Beardsley, Brian Murphy, Zac Oyama and Zac Oyama and Siobhan Thompson and dungeon master Brennan Lee Mulligan, their past villains.
"I never thought the White Pine King would fall into the gut of my own life," Wilson admitted. "I worked for two seasons in the Hollywood Bowl when I was in high school and now, for some reason, I'm fighting him there. It's so nice, like a fun NPC that's like a fun NPC created by Brennan Lee Mulligan, has been able to bring that richness, and this creature has really bothered me for years."
While the "Fantasy High" lifespan allows Wilson to continue to find new levels for the PCs he created, he says there is always magic to create new characters in a new world.
“It’s just as exciting to be a new friend, creating a new character to where we are in our lives,” Wilson said. “I’m the oldest person I’ve created a 'D20' character, the oldest character I’ve ever played. Bringing all the new skills and confidence that we don’t have this art form when we start using new characters and new energy. It’s a really fun starting point.”
Wilson's new role in "Cloudward, Ho!" is Monty Lamontgommery, the adventurer's transformational author, a now-retired ranger who pursues his adventures as a dime novelist.
"I was really excited when Brennan (Lee Mulligan) got together with the idea of this gang, and these adventurers," Wilson said. "I really wanted to play a young adventurer and someone who was excited and then trim and change myself to become a more presentational version of that person."
Monty Lamontgommery is far from Fabian Seacaster for his command and solemnity, the foppish is known for his title "Half-Elf Wilson." According to Wilson, Monty’s voice and personality were inspired by another adventurer’s transformational author: President Theodore Roosevelt.
"Honestly, many of the elements of my backstory and how well Teddy Roosevelt was around. I went back to a PBS documentary about him and his life, and it was really interesting to me that ``What does it mean to mean wildness?''''''''''''''''''''''
"What does it mean to live a life of communicating with moose?" Wilson wondered. "You are a person who really has nature and then you shape yourself into someone who can make a space where you can make decisions. I want an ancient soul, but with a little roughness, there are still some edges. Especially when his friends come and find him, I want this rough roughness to be released."
Monty marks Wilson's second author in Size 20:, whose character Lord Squak Airavis is revealed as a secret, thriving career called "airry pearly".
“Authority is a fun thing,” Wilson said. “I think it’s something that’s found on the table for Squak. That’s the beauty of D&D and the actual game, the ability to be at the heart of your character and find ways to support and get it.”
While Earry Pearry stayed primarily in the realm of frequent gags, Wilson said Monty’s authorship was always a key part of his character, and Brian Murphy’s “Cloudward, Ho!” joke made people more interesting. Character, Maxwell.
“For Monty, I wanted the character to be a folk hero and someone who people know, someone who has a great legend for him,” Wilson said. “The way Brennan and I do this is that he is the author of his dime shop novel, he is the core character, like the Buffalo Bill type of the steampunk era in the clouds.
Although Maxwell’s contempt for Monty’s books is primarily a product of Murphy and Wilson’s playful confrontation in real life, the early moments of improvisation end up being the basis for Monty’s character.
"I think there's a core element of these stories that Maxwell likes, but eventually Monty fell off," Wilson said. "I think we found a very interesting way to integrate it into the core of the character. That's why I love the actual game, and Murphy gave me this gift so I could spin it into, 'Okay, why Have done it Have those books been lost? Why do these books differ? What happened when Montgomery changed her life? ”
Wilson and any other brave hero did not enter the dome as a dungeon master, but he said he had the idea of playing sports with the usual DM Mulligan and his "D20" Castmates.
“I do it.
"And I think it would be fun to intimidate Brennan like the way he terrorized me," he added. "It's not just what I'm going to say, it's a guarantee that if I ever sat in that chair, I would make Brennan's life a hell because he's also full of love."