Posts Tagged ‘D&D’

Economics In RPGs 4: The Age Of Steam

This entry is part 4 of 16 in the series Economics In RPGs

Welcome & General Introduction With each passing entry in this series, we get to ground that is more familiar to all of us – either part of, or directly related to, our everyday lives, or part of the collective zeitgeist concerning the forces that influence those lives. This makes analysis easier (I know more of […]

Comments (2)

Economics In RPGs 3: Pre-Industrial Eras

This entry is part 3 of 16 in the series Economics In RPGs

Welcome & General Introduction Readers may have noticed that the previous part of the series promised the Renaissance and then barely mentioned the subject. That happened because, at least at first, there wasn’t a lot of economic difference, and what trends later started to manifest themselves were essentially the same trends that drove industrialization in […]

Comments Off on Economics In RPGs 3: Pre-Industrial Eras

Fade Into The Background

A Status Update It can be readily observed that this is not part 3 of the ongoing series on Economics in RPGs that I’ve been publishing for the last couple of weeks. Right up until the last moment, I was uncertain as to whether or not to continue with that series this week, but two […]

Comments Off on Fade Into The Background

Economics In RPGs 2: The Later Medieval

This entry is part 2 of 16 in the series Economics In RPGs

Welcome & General Introduction Following a successful Dr Who adventure in which the player started to see how a number of plot threads intersected, my head is currently full of the strange environment in which the next adventure is to occur. I mean, this is the homeworld of his current companion – a psionic sentient […]

Comments Off on Economics In RPGs 2: The Later Medieval

Economics In RPGs 1: The Early Medieval

This entry is part 1 of 16 in the series Economics In RPGs

I’ve been working on this article for several weeks now, on and off, and have come to the conclusion that it will be beneficial to the subject matter to break it into a series of related posts, dividing one concept from another. It started out as an intention to simply explain “inflation” to RPG GMs […]

Comments (4)

A Tale Of Two Empires (and more)

This post details two Empires contending with each other in the Warcry campaign at the moment. I’ll talk more about that in a little bit. There’s also some discussion of when a Kingdom needs to become an Empire, and a mysterious religious body that seems entwined in events. The working title of the article was […]

Comments (2)

The Land Of Green – No DALL-E version

A bit of a fill-in article this week (and maybe next week, too), so that I can put additional effort into a larger article on Economies in RPGs. In the original version of this article, it was illustrated with a composite image created from three DALL-E (Ai-generated) images. Part of the reason for doing so […]

Comments Off on The Land Of Green – No DALL-E version

Pieces Of Creation: The Land Of Green

This post features a composite of three AI-generated images. If you disapprove of AI-generated content, you may prefer to view a version without the AI-Content. If so, just click on This Link: https://www.campaignmastery.com/blog/the-land-of-green-no-dall-e-version Having searched for jungle images before, I knew that finding the right one would be problematic, so I turned to DALL-E. The […]

Comments Off on Pieces Of Creation: The Land Of Green

3 Things Every Player and GM Should Know

There are three facts about a character that can be considered definitive of what sort of person they are, diagnostic of what sort of mistakes they will make, and instrumental in defining what sorts of adventures will consume their attention. These are not the whole sum of the substance of the character or his personality, […]

Comments Off on 3 Things Every Player and GM Should Know

Taking The Initiative and changing it

I was thinking about the perception of time and how that doesn’t match up with the mechanism of time-keeping in the standard initiative systems in games. I mean, it’s certainly possible to design additional mechanics to take these variations into account, and reinvigorate a system that has become predictable. More interesting AND more realistic at […]

Comments Off on Taking The Initiative and changing it

Big Mysteries, Small Mysteries PLUS!

I’ve been fortunate enough to write a number of very well-regarded articles on how to run mysteries in RPGs. There was The Butler Did It: Mystery Plotlines in RPGs (even WOTC linked to this one), The Jar Of Jam and The Wounded Monarch: Two Mystery Examples, which builds on the earlier article, Delving Deeper Into […]

Comments Off on Big Mysteries, Small Mysteries PLUS!

Overcoming The GM Crash

Most people – and I include many players and GMs in that grouping – have no idea how tiring it can be to run a game, and try to do it well. For many years, I didn’t notice it, either; my reserves of stamina were sufficient that I could happily GM for 5 hrs, take […]

Comments Off on Overcoming The GM Crash