What Kind of LARP is Bicolline?
Short answer?
It's not a traditional LARP. Like, at all.
Bicolline sits in this weird, middle ground between a traditional LARP, a renaissance fair, a medieval airsoft war zone, and a 1000-player version of the Twilight Imperium board game, but with more goblins and louder music.
It's a place where you can throw down in massive battles, scheme like a board game villain, or just vibe in a tavern while bardcore blasts in the background.
Forget character sheets. There's no XP. No skill trees. No "roll to seduce."
Here, the only stat that matters is your drip, and how convincingly you play the part.
Want to be a noble duke? Get yourself that in-game title, then talk like one, act like one, and for the love of all things immersive, look like one.
At Bico, "what you see is what you get" isn't just a rule, it's gospel.
The Line Between In-Game and Out-Game? What Line?
At Bicolline, reality is... fluid.
It's totally normal to walk past a group in the middle of a dramatic in-game trial, complete with yelling, finger-pointing, and someone swearing vengeance, then, five seconds later, overhear an orc and an elf casually chatting about how good Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 is. (They're right. It slaps.)
Sometimes you'll bounce between medieval politics, fantasy drama, and real world geekery in the same conversation. And somehow, it all just blends.
That blurry edge is part of what makes Bico so special, it's not about rigid immersion, it's about living in the magic together.
But be warned...
Just because the line between in-game and out-game gets a little grey doesn't mean it's open mic night in the middle of a war council.
Yeah, people joke around, and side comments happen. That's normal. But when it's time for serious in-game moments such as geopolitical meetings or key events, try to keep the immersion strong. Save the memes for the campfire, not the throne room.
Now... about phones.
Put. That. Cellphone. Away.
Nothing breaks the medieval vibes faster than someone pulling out their glowing rectangle to snap a selfie in front of a ritual circle.
Look, we get it. Memories are awesome, and that sunset over the field looks straight out of a movie. But unless you've got official Bicolline permission, keep the phone in your tent. Respect the vibe, respect the players, and live in the moment.
In short:
Stay in character when it matters
Hide your phone like it's cursed
Let the magic stay magical