03-16-2016, 10:40 AM
As we don't have any setting that specifically invites muggles in, I wish to point out some of the countless ways you can perfeclly easily bring a muggle character into this game & have a whole world of possibilities open for it - even if they don't know or never learn about magic's existence! They can know or learn, though. Just, they really don't need to in order to be endlessly and colourfully played to a muggle's full potential.
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- A muggle can come across a magical creature somewhere in the world and begin to study it. Even just that can provide a lot of interesting and colourful events without the muggle gaining any knowledge of magic's existence. (You know, not all creatures classified as magical, actually have magical powers. And the muggle myths and books don't include every creature that is real and aren't entirely accurate about those that are.
- Ghosts are real in the Potter universe. A muggle could be a ghost buster even without knowing about magic's existence at all.
- There could be a Poltergeist in a muggle's home.
- Even a muggle can become a werewolf and without needing to know about magic's existence. Or, they could be a werewolf hunter! Or a vampire/vampire hunter. (In this RPG, vampires aren't the undead. They're a combo of the Hollywood vampire and the real life disease.)
- There's a reason why the Ministry of Magic has professionally trained Obliviators.
- Does a muggle believe his or her eyes? Where does learning about magic lead them - into the wizarding sociery, or into therapy, or somwhere else? One small department in the Ministry can't possibly hear about and track every muggle who's wittnessed magic, and even if they at some point did catch up to each individual tons of stuff could've happened in between. And not every muggle needs to be obliviated.
- A muggle could be like Vernon Dursley. That kind of a muggle might be especially delicious to write about if the person doesn't know about magic's realness but occasionally runs into it.
- Even a worse muggle could become a modern day witch hunter. It doesn't even require knowledge about magic's existence – it's enough that the person believes and is deeply afraid of it. After all, that's all the Witch Trials were in real life. They could these days take any form, as in the character doesn't necessary have to be a raving murderer about it.
- Or maybe a muggle is a wanna-be witch/wizard with a completely wrong idea about the matters because he/she doesn't know about the real thing. There could be tons of these type of characters.
- A muggle can be in a relationship/married to a witch or a wizard, knowingly or unknowingly.
- A muggle-born's parents could find out about magic before Hogwarts invites the child in, because the child has manifested accidental magic since early childhood.
- Or maybe a muggle simply forms a close friendship with a magical person, in which case the friend's need to hide magic can provide all kinds of situations and even problems.
- There could be muggles who were abducted and tortured by Voldemort or Death Eaters in the war but never killed because of Voldemort's sudden disappearence and following breaking up of the DEs. Such muggles have lots of different paths to take, depending on what exactly happened to them and what they believe happened to them.
- As for stuff simply between two muggle characters...Well, for one the wannabe witch/wizard thing works between any characters, but one other fantastic example of an interesting relationship type is the relationship between the FBI agents' Fox Mulder and Dana Scully in the '90s TV series The X-Files.
Mulder believed in the supernatural, especially in aliens whereas Scully was a passionate woman of science. Of course in the case of their relationship and story their line of work and soulmate...ness provided tons of additional awesomeness, interest and loveability, but basically such belief-system dynamic can provide lots of interesting and complex possibilities in any setting and world.