Okay, so this didn't happen in a roleplaying game. It happened on the train two days ago.
My wife and I were sitting on the train, heading into the city to work in the morning (we work at the same place), and we were talking about how she needs to make a character for a DC Adventures superheros game that's being run at our gaming club this year. She said she was having trouble coming up with ideas, since she'd used her last idea in another game (a cyborg that could mimic other people, so was like a spy, with a mechanical toe that could explode).
Now, I don't know how it happened, but throughout my nerd life, I've never really fallen into the comic book reading thing, so Marvel, DC, other - it's all really the same to me. But we started talking about that classic argument, the difference between a hero and a superhero, because apparently Batman is DC. Batman, in my opinion, is not a superhero. He's just rich. That's not a superpower. But apparently, my wife says he is super intelligent. Bah. Anyway, we were going through other heroes that don't have special powers (like Iron Man, just another rich boy) and we got to the Phantom. I've never read the Phantom, and I don't think I've even seen the movie. I've only ever seen the occasional 4 panel in a newspaper. My wife doesn't really know much about him either.
So we started talking about whether he's a superhero, and if so, what's his ability? All we really knew about him was he wore purple spandex and a masked, that he solved crime, and he punched people in the face and left a skull motif on them with his ring. Apparently, that skull motif marks someone for life when he punches them in the face (so my wife tells me), so we figured that's not normal, and decided that must be his super power - he has a magic ring that leaves a permanent skull impression when you punch someone. Woo. Talk about scraping the bottom of the superpower barrel. I think he also has a gun, but neither of us had ever seen him shoot anyone, so he must just use it to get people to put their hands up, so he can then punch them in the face.
I said that my wife should think about modelling her new superhero character on the Phantom, since no-one else would have thought of having a superpower like leaving a mark on people when you punch them in the face. But we hit a problem - how would you possibly spend enough character points to create a superhero whose power is "I solve crime, and I punch people in the face and it leaves a mark with a magic ring"? So we embarked on our quest for the trip - to try and work out where all those points could go. By this time, you could tell that several people around us were listening to our conversation - people glancing at us, grinning or snickering a little when we said something particularly funny, or just shaking their heads as if we're crazy.
Then I hit upon a great idea. We had this inkling that the Phantom had passed down his ring through the ages, and so Phantom had been around for hundreds of years, building up a myth that he can't die, or he's a ghost, or something. So we thought, why not expand this idea a little? If there are different Phantoms through time, why can't there be different Phantoms around the world? Think about it. If you shoot one, sure, they die, but if another one lives somewhere else, then it seems like the Phantom never dies. If two Phantoms foil a crime at the same time in different places, then it's like he has super speed. Now, think about what you actually need to be a Phantom: purple spandex, a mask, and the ability to punch someone in the face. Take away the magic ring, and you've got a relatively lax recruitment strategy.
I mean, what would it take? A bunch of people wearing purple spandex, an internet forum (at GhostsWhoWalk.com), and mobile phones with internet access? And of course, for your AGMs you can just meet at comic conventions dressed as the Phantom. When you're talking about real crime and fighting and stuff, people will just think it's a really epic roleplay. My wife brought up the problem of where they all get their crime solving skills. Are they all ex-cops? But that's all a function of the internet forum - not only do you have different regional Phantoms (Barth and Wells Phantom, Greenwich Phantom, Soho Phantom, Sydney Phantom, Mumbai Phantom, Dakkar Phantom), but you also have Phantoms with different skill sets. So East Bromwich Phantom finds some sticky residue at a crime scene. Collecting it in a vial, he puts a message on MyPhantom, "Hey guyz, got sticky goo here. Orange, runny. Ideas?" Then Orange County Phantom says, "I work as a chemist with a gas chromatograph. Send it over." 4-10 days later. for shipping, "It's a glue-type substance with potassium tetobenzoate. Helpful?" Then, "Islington Phantom here. I work retail in a hobby shop. That's Heston Crazy Glue," and so on until crime is solved, criminal is punched in the face, and life goes on.
Of course, my wife pointed out, people would notice that the Phantom didn't look the same - especially when you've got tall Sydney Phantom , short Brisbane Phantom, a dark-skinned Darwin Phantom (no racial discrimination), and a female Victoria Phantomme (they had to let in girl Phantoms since the 70s). But hey, with all these Phantoms running around, people will quickly forget what the 'real' Phantom looks like. If two Phantoms turn up at the same crime scene, they scissors-paper-punch for it. But then, really, Phantoms aren't meant to cross over into each other's territory, unless they're on holiday or something. And for those people who think that Phantoms might be a pushover with all this outsourcing, just remember that you never know which Phantom is a computer programmer, and which is a retired cop, or a boxing champion. And don't think it's so easy for a criminal to dress up like a Phantom and infiltrate the organisation - because Isle of Wight Phantom is a material manufacturer, and is the only one who makes the official purple spandex.
By this time, some people were specifically trying not to look at us, and one specific guy was constantly cracking up laughing as he listened.
We started thinking about how this character would actually work. Can you imagine, in your superhero game, every time you got together to discuss the crime, a different Phantom would be standing there, depending on where you were? Sometimes he's tall, sometimes fat, sometimes with pimples, always one step behind in the conversation and checking the forum backlog on their phone, always with a different voice, never admitting that they are in fact a different Phantom? But also always with a different skill set, able to get expert opinions on almost any subject, and ever-keen to connect clenched fist to criminal face? It would take a fair bit of effort to constantly be playing a different persona every time the action moved to a different area, but it would be a great laugh.
And then, we had to get off the train, and head to work. So this is Westleigh Phantom signing off, ever alert for the call to action when the Phantoms need a court transcriptionist, or local criminals need a punch in the face!