Posts Tagged ‘Campaigns’

Into Each Chaos, A Little Order Must Fall: Coping With Randomness

Last week, in Into Each Plot, A Little Chaos Must Fall, I discussed the inevitability of chaos in adventures, the cumulative effect of three compounding sources of randomness: Player Decisions (unscripted player-plot interactions), Die Rolls (unscripted character-plot interactions), and GM Thought Bubbles (unscripted GM-plot interactions). In essence, if the last quarter or so of what […]

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Into Each Plot, A Little Chaos Must Fall

A Narrative Evolution Of Reality I construct very detailed plotlines for most of my campaigns. There are: Primary Campaign-Level Plotlines that permanently shape or reshape the context within which all the individual adventures take place. Usually consist of tent-pole Events and paradigm shifts within adventures, and are often describable as the outcome of a string […]

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He Once Was Elves – The March 2019 Blog Carnival

The March 2019 Blog Carnival challenges GMs to revisit and re-purpose material from the first half of their career behind the scene. For Campaign Mastery’s first entry (I have another in mind but might not have time to write it) I’m going Waaaay back – all the way, in fact, to my very first AD&D […]

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The Language Of Magic: A Sense of Wonder for the Feb 2019 Blog Carnival

The February 2019 Blog Carnival is being hosted by Sea Of Stars, with the subject of Making Magic Wondrous. This wasn’t an easy subject, because I’ve already done so much in this area regarding magic items of various types. I suspect others may have found it so, too, because entries are thin on the ground […]

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In The Beginning… Not! – drafting plots from the middle

I hardly ever start plotting a story or an adventure at the beginning. There’s too great a chance of chasing yourself down a blind alley when you do so. The First Pass: Back To Front Instead, I leap ahead to the next significant development and ask “what do the star(s) of the story – the […]

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Like sand through the fingers: Time waste and Campaign Prep

I’m writing and uploading this week’s article in advance because right in the middle of the time when I’m supposed to be writing, I have a medical treatment scheduled. This article isn’t my first choice to fill the breach – I planned to present something on politics within RPG settings- but it bogged down, mostly […]

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Blast from the Past: On Feats

This article was originally published by Johnn Four as an extra for Roleplaying Tips entitled “Five Things About Feats”. He recently decided to sunset it, but I think there’s still life in the old girl yet. So, when he offered to pass it back to me for revision into a CM article, I didn’t hesitate. […]

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The Janus: A new concept in Campaign Structure

…at least, I hope it’s new. As I wrote, a strong sense of deja vu crept over me, and it started to sound awfully familiar. But a careful search of past posts failed to turn up anything… I come up with more ideas than I can ever use. Until I co-founded Campaign Mastery, I simply […]

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A Measure Of Success: GM’s ways of ‘winning’ in an RPG

This article has been in preparation for a very long time – since May 2017, in fact. I hope it proves to have been worth the wait… While there is no such thing as “winning” in an RPG, that doesn’t mean that there isn’t success, and that not all success is created equal. Some success […]

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Randomness In RPGs

Anarchy. Chaos. Flexibility. Uncertainty. Control. Challenge. Unpredictability. All of these words can be used to describe the influence of Randomness within an RPG. Every GM uses randomness in all seven of these ways, the relative significance being the primary variant. But why do RPGs contain a random element? Randomness in RPGs derives from two sources, […]

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Construction Methodology and RPGs

There’s a show that I like to watch now and then on a local Free-To-Air lifestyle channel called “Rescue My Renovation”. It appeals because it not only explains what was done wrongly but the correct way that it should have been done, and why. This presents practical information that I’ve found useful from time to […]

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The Splash Vector: Delivering plots to unhittable PC Targets

There are lots of good reasons to have a strong supporting cast in an RPG. They permit interactions which reveal or highlight aspects of a PC that otherwise might get an infrequent airing, for one thing. Trusted NPCs can serve as proxies for the PCs, or can supplement their skill-base. Or, fourth, they can facilitate […]

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