Honestly, those people are the often part of what makes the game fun. Mind you, not the people who cause problems with it or who are being purposefully obstinate/trying to ruin the fun of others, but it tends to be the guys who are willing to think outside the box that make funny and cool stories and characters.

Very interesting stories, but I am confused by your definition of Roleplaying problems.NameIsRobertPaulson said:I was the kind of person who tried to come up with odd solutions to RP problems.
Example: We were fighting a young ice dragon in a cave made of ice. I asked if there were icicles on the ceiling? When DM said yes, I used Ice Plane to levitate myself and our warrior up to the largest one. He cut off the icicle, I used Mana Ray to turn it into a death laser. Two action points, and a combined roll of 68 on 4 D20s resulted in a REALLY fucked up dragon. We burned its wing off, and left it with less than 6 HP.
Example two: We were fighting kobolds, and I asked their weight. When DM asked me why, I said it was important. He said 3 lbs. I used Grab Object, lifted a kobold that was a foot away into the air, stuck my sword out, and repeatedly moved him back and forth on the sword, since I was allowed to move him 10 feet. BEST D&D MOMENT EVER.