Archive for the ‘Game Philosophy’ Category

A Stack Of Surprises: Blog Carnival November 2015

Welcome to the Blog Carnival Host Page for November 2015! In the coming month it is once again Campaign Mastery’s turn to host the Blog Carnival (if you’re quick, you can still catch the tail end of the October Blog Carnival about creepy things coming to town over at Of Dice And Dragons). This time […]

Comments (21)

The Breakdown of Intersecting Prophecies

The recent trip to attend a couple of surprise family functions was the closest thing I’ve had to a holiday in almost 3 years, and only the second in about 5. Anticipating that it would be difficult to get back into the work habits that had built up in that time period, I even made […]

Comments (4)

The Conundrum Of Coincidence

The concept of “coincidence” was a thorny problem for philosophers starting from the ancient Greeks. Plato, in Phaedo, defined “inquiry into nature” as a search for “the causes of each thing; why each thing comes into existence, why it goes out of existence, why it exists”. Aristotle went further, developing a theory of causality, commonly […]

Comments (4)

What is An Adventure?

I’ve been making a conscious effort to use the term “Adventure” lately in articles here at Campaign Mastery, instead of any of the alternatives, simply because more people seemed familiar with it, and it seemed to be the most ubiquitous reference, but a few weeks back, I had a troubling thought: We all think we […]

Comments (6)

Tales From The Front Line: Critical Absences – an unresolved question

This entry is part 2 of 2 in the series Tales from the front line

The Context Saxon, one of my players and a fellow GM who has contributed guidance through ATGMs on a number of occasions was telling an anecdote the other week about what transpired in the D&D 5e campaign that he plays in. It seems that one of the players was unable to attend. That happens in […]

Comments Off on Tales From The Front Line: Critical Absences – an unresolved question

Fantastic Flop: GMing Lessons from a filmic failure

I’ve been a fan of the Fantastic Four, off and on, since the halcyon days of Lee and Kirby. I was there, reading, when the being who would become Adam Warlock was first introduced. I was there for the first appearance of the Inhumans. I was there for the Silver Surfer and Galactus. Through low-priced […]

Comments (1)

Basics For Beginners (and the over-experienced) Pt 3: Preparations

This entry is part 3 of 12 in the series Basics For Beginners (and the over-experienced)

I’ve been asked a number of times what advice I have for a beginning GM. This 15-part series is an attempt to answer that question – while throwing in some tips and reminders of the basics for more experienced GMs. This will probably be the last in the series for a little while, I don’t […]

Comments Off on Basics For Beginners (and the over-experienced) Pt 3: Preparations

Tales from the front line: The Initiative Conflict

This entry is part 1 of 2 in the series Tales from the front line

I originally intended to present the Tavern Generator that I promised on Monday as today’s post, but it will take longer than I initially thought. Probably one more day of designing the tables and two days to format them – largely because what I am offering is far more robust and advanced than the basic […]

Comments Off on Tales from the front line: The Initiative Conflict

Basics For Beginners (and the over-experienced) Pt 2: Creation

This entry is part 2 of 12 in the series Basics For Beginners (and the over-experienced)

I’ve been asked on more than one occasion what advice I would have for a beginning GM. It’s a question that troubled me; I’ve been GMing for so long that I thought I might have lost contact with the beginner. I have also resisted the topic because Campaign Mastery is more targeted at experienced GMs. […]

Comments (1)

Imperfect Imbalance – Personal Injury Law in RPGs

To really get to grips with your RPG world, you have to understand how the invented environment affects the everyday life of the inhabitants. That’s more easily said than done. One technique is to answer a long series of questions, progressing from the simple to the profound, as shown in my first series here at […]

Comments (2)

Plunging Into Game Physics Pt 2: Strange Mechanics

This entry is part 2 of 4 in the series Plunging into Game Physics

As you can see from the title, this is part 2 of a series looking at the underlying principles and applications of Game Physics. The first part looked at exactly what the term meant, and found that it needed quite a lot of definition because it could be used to mean any of several different […]

Comments (2)

Plunging Into Game Physics Pt 1 – What Is a ‘Game Physics’?

This entry is part 1 of 4 in the series Plunging into Game Physics

“Game Physics” is a term that not enough GMs take the time to think about in depth. Physics is about isolating a single variable and measurable quantity, then altering that variable while observing the measurable quantity to shed light on the relationship between the two – then trying to explain the results in such a […]

Comments (5)