Archive for the ‘PCs’ Category

Michael Schumacher and RPGs

The career of Formula One legend Michael Schumacher holds some important lessons for RPG GMs. Backstory A video on the achievements of legendary F1 driver Michael Schumacher inspired this article when I connected a couple of stray thoughts together. Having roughed out the content in my head, I decided not to write it, to do […]

Comments (1)

The Call To Arms: A Guest Article by Alexander Atoz Pt 2 of 2

This is part 2 of the guest article on Wars in TTRPGs by Alexander Atoz. Wars are inevitable in most RPGs, sooner or later, but GMs often struggle to walk the fine line between making the conflict seem realistically big enough and keeping the experience personal to the players. Vast armies lend themselves to Roll-playing, […]

Comments (2)

The Call To Arms: A Guest Article by Alexander Atoz Pt 1 of 2

Today I bring you a guest article on Wars in TTRPGs by Alexander Atoz, in two parts. Wars are inevitable in most RPGs, sooner or later, but GMs often struggle to walk the fine line between making the conflict seem realistically big enough and keeping the experience personal to the players. Vast armies lend themselves […]

Comments (3)

Culture And The Face Of Danger

An observed pattern sheds surprising light on how RPG styles differ from one nation to another. This is the latest in my series of time-out posts in between the Trade In Fantasy series. The YouTube viewer that I use most often displays, at the end of a video, thumbnails of other videos that you might […]

Comments Off on Culture And The Face Of Danger

Distributing The Narrative

Why splitting the party is a natural development, learning to handle it, and techniques that it opens up for the GM. Plus a writing tip or 2! That’s today’s prescription. This is the latest in my series of time-out posts in between the Trade In Fantasy series. Phases Of Experience “Don’t Split The Party” is […]

Comments (2)

The Momentum Of Breadcrumbs

There are ways of imparting dynamic life to a background and to characters that are hard work and ways that are easy. This is one of the easy ways. This is the latest in my series of time-out posts in between the Trade In Fantasy series. I’m concurrently reading two books right now: Dr Who […]

Comments (5)

The Scope of Space

Many authors have tried to explain how vast space, and the universe contained within it, really are, usually with less than total success, though with each attempt, some few are reached. This is both something that Sci-Fi GMs need to understand and yet, often hand-wave. I have thought of another approach, one that is strictly […]

Comments (2)

Campaign Workflow For GMs Pt 2

Running a campaign is a lot easier if there’s a clear process that maximizes opportunities for success and avoids the worst traps and pitfalls. Campaign Mastery has again been recognized as one of the top 20 blogs devoted to the subject of RPGs. Given the caliber of the opposition, I consider this to be a […]

Comments (4)

Campaign Workflow For GMs Pt 1

Starting and Running a campaign is a lot easier if there’s a clearly understood process that maximizes the opportunities for success and avoids the largest traps and pitfalls. As usual, I worked on the next part of Trade In Fantasy until it became clear that it wasn’t quite going to be ready in time, then […]

Comments (1)

Trade In Fantasy Ch. 4: Modes Of Transport, Pt 3

This entry is part 11 of 20 in the series Trade In Fantasy

Today’s post focuses on Rafts and small boats like Kayaks and Canoes. The defining trait of such vessels is that while they can have sails, their primary motive power derives from the use of oars or paddles. It’s taken quite a bit longer than I intended, due to a fundamental truism of publishing, at least […]

Comments Off on Trade In Fantasy Ch. 4: Modes Of Transport, Pt 3

A Recipe For (Small) Disasters: Cooking in RPGs

So your character has a cooking skill. What dishes can he prepare? What will be inedible? What does that mean? Adaptable all systems. We’ve all grown up with the concept of a recipe being utterly reliable. If you do the same thing every time, you will get the same result, every time. Most of us […]

Comments (1)

‘No One Can Foil My Evil Plan’

“I attack him while he’s distracted.” That’s not an appropriate response to an antagonist Monologing, but it happened once. There came a time when a new player, unfamiliar with the genre, joined the Adventurer’s Club campaign. At one point, in an adventure, the villain began to Monologue – and that was this player’s response. This […]

Comments Off on ‘No One Can Foil My Evil Plan’