Get Lairs & Legends! Over 700 pages of D&D 5e GM resources: adventures spanning levels 1 to 15, 100+ new monsters, encounters, puzzles, traps, villains, NPCs, maps, and more! - the-dm-lair.myshopify.com/collections/lairs-legends The DM Lair Discord! discord.gg/thedmlair
@quonomonna81263 жыл бұрын
your discord server has more rules than D&D
@lanefunai47143 жыл бұрын
White with hollandaise
@theDMLair3 жыл бұрын
Thank you. That is a feature not a bug.
@garhent2 жыл бұрын
Is critical role scripted - no. Is critical role storylined and the players told in advance damn well they are. Take a look at the set up for each fight, the DM and Players know exactly what's coming their way with the fully set up area. Their lines are mostly adlib.
@etherknightmare11812 жыл бұрын
As a improv prefered dm, I still plan. owo And am relatively new, too.
@TheodoreMinick3 жыл бұрын
"No plan survives contact with the [players]." This is true. But this is also true: "Plans are useless. Planning is essential." Like Luke points out, the more you plan, the better you'll be at coming up with a new plan at a moment's notice. Improv uses the same "muscles" as planning. And if you have planned for every possibility that you can think of, when your players inevitably come up with something you didn't, you'll be better equipped to come up with the response.
@nilsjonsson44463 жыл бұрын
Good points. Still in my experience at least 90 % of plans survive the players
@NegatveSpace3 жыл бұрын
Plans are still needed so someone knows what to change when different stuff starts happening.
@TheodoreMinick3 жыл бұрын
@@NegatveSpace exactly.
@urdaanglospey66662 жыл бұрын
Also, planning gets you in the villain's mindset or more familiar with the situation at hand so, when things go awry, you have a better idea of the pieces/pawns/etc in play that are available to respond with.
@AuntLoopy1232 жыл бұрын
@@nilsjonsson4446 You obviously don't have MY group of players. I LOVE how unexpected they are. They are patient with me, as I sit there, holding my head, moaning, "Whaaaaa? How the heck do I DM THIS?!" And then, I respond, and wind up changing canon. For instance, in our world, carrion crawlers are now allergic to and terrified of chocolate. Also, chocolate makes "chocolate noises" that are very loud and frightening. Because why the heck not?! It was hilarious, so I ran with it. It all started with a critical failure, while one player was trying to tame the carrion crawler, by offering it chocolate. The animal handling check was not likely to succeed, but that Nat 1 clinched it. I always come up with some sort of more-than-mere-failure for a Nat 1, so I said that "It gets a rash, and does 1d4 of damage. It's shocked and surprised." The next thing I know, they're throwing chocolate, and smearing it on their weapons, and casting minor illusion of 5-foot-cubes of chocolate behind the carrion crawlers. 5-foot-cubes of chocolate that "make chocolate noises" thanks to another minor illusion spell. And carrion crawlers have an Int score of 1, so they were terrified of it. And now, it is part of our world lore. Carrion crawlers are allergic to, and terrified of, chocolate. They kept four carrion crawlers contained DURING A COMBAT, simply by drawing a circle of chocolate around them. Now they're almost out of chocolate, and have to get back to town, and try to place a special order for more, though the Lionshield Coster, because they used seven pounds of chocolate in one encounter. Seriously, there was no way to PLAN for that sort of stuff. My niece doesn't just think outside of the box. To her, the box doesn't even exist. Put her with her father (who taught her about ignoring boxes), and no plan I make for them is going to go exactly to plan. I have to spend SO MUCH of my time thinking on the fly. But prep is key, so that I can respond with some sort of confidence, and know how things WORK in this world, and what is likely to happen, due to their actions, and "Well, I know that not 50 feet away, around the corner and behind a door, are X monsters, who hear this commotion, and respond by..." We've been playing for a while now, and NOT ONE of our encounters have gone according to my plan. This is the group that used a rope to pick a lock. "You do whatnow? HOW? Well, when you explain it that way, it actually makes sense. OK, I guess you can try that. Give me a Dexterity check. Wow. You rolled REALLY well."
@schylerfontenot73583 жыл бұрын
These things are also good reminders for veteran DMs. Especially knowing that your players aren’t judging you as much as you think, and knowing that you’ll have a bad session every once in a while… very important to keep in mind
@023Whiplash Жыл бұрын
He mentions these things, so why say ‘also’
@yugdaBretsiM3 жыл бұрын
20 year DM here. This vid is spot on. It took me years to learn some of these lessons. New DMs take this to heart.
@theDMLair3 жыл бұрын
20 years. That's awesome.
@joeharvey55562 жыл бұрын
I played dnd 5yrs when younger. I just learning 5e. Not played in longtime. Ppl want me to dm but im green. I feel not ready .. what do you recommend..? Im poor with combat etc
@glennjordan50572 жыл бұрын
@@joeharvey5556 my best advice for this is aside from running something premade is to give your players upfront honesty that you’re new and learning. Then run a time loop based game. Then you can get messy and make potentially fatal mistakes but it’ll all be okay.
@bestlogic95432 жыл бұрын
I will run some one timers then after 3 months when they say im good we get into module etc
@yugdaBretsiM2 жыл бұрын
@@joeharvey5556 Late reply, but honestly? Jump right in, don’t let failure get to you. You’ll make mistakes regardless of how much you prepare, we all do (I especially still do.) Treat any mistakes as learning experiences, always err in encounter setups on the side of too hard, (especially this edition, PCs are very resilient,) and never let them know what you’re thinking. The number one thing you’ll need to learn is to think on your feet, which no amount of world building, planning or record keeping will train you to do. You really just have to get that one “trial by fire” and it takes time. Above all act like what they are doing was always your plan, no matter how many notes you have to rip up.
@xam_insight2 жыл бұрын
"If you see your players laughing and smiling, if they come back week after week, then you're probably doing just fine." This made me genuinely cry in relief. I'm judging myself too harshly! Thank you for making me realize it, Luke!
@TabooX19843 жыл бұрын
"The essence of a role-playing game is that it is a group cooperative experience." ~ Gary Gygax 👍
@jonsimpson62403 жыл бұрын
Proceeds to invent the tomb of horrors and tomb of annihilation... Rip Gary. Thanks for the games.
@fenixmeaney61703 жыл бұрын
@@jonsimpson6240 yeah, acererak is kinda an asshole And really creepy Not in an undead way, as much in a "erase someone's memory and keep them trapped in a lagoon in your dungeon as a personal joke"/"trans your gender and send you outside naked" kinda creepy
@brnatlas96112 жыл бұрын
Right on Gary
@quonomonna81263 жыл бұрын
protip to new aspiring DMs: forget trying to play with friends that you want to get interested in the game, find new friends that are already want to play
@claracastilhooliveira37933 жыл бұрын
This tip is gold, am still going to keep trying to get my baby cousins to play though. While I keep playing with my other groups, obviously.
@ickmonster732 жыл бұрын
Of course, ask your friends, if you have them. Lots of people want to play and don't have the balls to speak up unless asked. Now I'm running 2 games at once for 11 people.
@Venslor2 жыл бұрын
I think a good balance between people who have played and people that haven't is best. Otherwise, no one ever joins the hobby, but having a few people you know already enjoy the game help hold the game together while the other players learn the rules and figure out if they like it or not. Some people just aren't going to enjoy it. I had friends who just didn't like that they couldn't control the narrative like a video game.
@shawdow3572 жыл бұрын
I’m currently making this mistake.
@bigstupidgrin2 жыл бұрын
*cries in middle school me trying to run AD&D*
@viperv67683 жыл бұрын
My previous DM actually quit half way because he wasn't having fun. We were not doing literally anything he planned for... and that was both of our faults. He would make everything seem optional or not important, and besides me, my group was very indecisive, so it turned out badly for all of us. For example, my character's brother was going into a dungeon. So I asked if his life was at risk if I didn't go with him. DM said he'd be fine. So I didn't go with him and got back to the main quest. The DM had the whole dungeon planned out and he was very disappointed. However, so was I because I wanted to go down there too, but i thought I'd be helping my DM more by going back to the main quest since I figured if thr DM wanted me to go with my brother, then he'd have told me he was in danger or about some reward. I say all of this to new DMs from a player perspective... if a player asks you "I'm not sure what to do" don't be afraid to break the 4th wall and just say "well I planned for you guys to go into the dungeon." In my limited experience, if you tell players you have a direction planned, then they will be more than happy to go that way and come up with a realistic character reason to do so. And another note- be careful saying "the room SEEMS empty" when it's actually empty... cause players will spend far too long trying to solve a puzzle that isn't there.
@tylerwellman82522 жыл бұрын
It is perfectly OK to lead the party in these moments. You gave a solid example when a little railroading is a good thing.
@nightskye152 жыл бұрын
Thank you such for the explanation and example. As a long time DM, it's hard to tell when it is appropriate to railroad and especially how. But being upfront was overlooked by me. Thank you again for the Insight and Inspiration 😉
@nemooh Жыл бұрын
you're better off. keep moving. But it is Dungeons and Dragons. If there is a dungeon or dragon, you must. It's in the title, after all.
@matzl1211 ай бұрын
@@tylerwellman8252 im hosting my first DnD with my friend group and i never did any DnD or DMing before, we are playing stromwreck isle and i noticed my group didnt go the way where i had stuff ready and there are many kobold as friendly npcs, i just created a kobold named flip that put them to the right direction without breaking the game and it worked wonders, had to do that a second time when the party spend way to long in a tavern, drinking...
@xThunderxWolfx11 ай бұрын
It seems like your party just isn't very smart
@shortal3 жыл бұрын
So since you asked for the "Nein Flavours of Aspargus", here is my explanation: 1) The Cobalt Aspargus - It somehow tastes blue in a kind, not to confuse with the smurf variant 2) The wild grown Aspargus - It tastes a clay. Clay. That's it. 3) The Aspargus of the Sea - It tastes a lot like fish, yet it is vegan. Delicious. 4) The Colorspray Aspargus - Having his name from a wild sprinkle of color, its taste really reminds me of tealeafs. 5) The Two-Faced Aspargus - The taste of this one really depends, on some days its really beautiful and delicious, on other days is smells and looks like a rotten green cucumber. 6) The electrified Aspargus - This one is a special. Unlike most other Aspargus, this one gets fried via electricity and gets really crispy and tender that way. 7) The Rainbow Aspargus - Probably my favorite one, it tastes like sprinkled with the dust of deliciousness. 8) The Hot Boi Aspargus - Well this one is more for the eye, than for the taste. It has a dark, purple look, and it kinda tastes like regular aspargus, but with a twist. 9) The Reborn Aspargus - It tastes like a mixture of the Sea and Colorspray variant, but in the end, it still creates his own flavour. Delicious. You are welcome!
@theunderjack83492 жыл бұрын
Came here looking for you
@elijahhensley16482 жыл бұрын
LUKE GIVE THIS MAN A PRIZE
@AFmedic Жыл бұрын
I have to disagree with you. There is one, and ONLY one flavor of Asparagus. It is called "Inedible" ( or as some say ... Sh*t) LOL
@シズ-i9x6 ай бұрын
Can I roll to romance the Hot Boi
@noamdj3015 ай бұрын
@@AFmedic nah, when its a soup its mawh
@bryanlangerud79533 жыл бұрын
These tips are exactly what I learned over 40+ years playing DND, it’s good to see that they’re being passed on to the younger players.
@beaujacquier25143 жыл бұрын
Since I've literally just started putting together my first campaign I really appreciate this. Thank you.
@beaujacquier25142 жыл бұрын
@@ork44 Ill have to check it out, thank you.
@trevormartin9539 Жыл бұрын
same.
@richardwilliamsiii30352 жыл бұрын
I really appreciate this video, I've been "planning" my first DMing session and secretly been avoiding it because I was so worried about how I'd do
@theDMLair2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, just gotta start. Put a date on the calendar with your players and just do it, rain or shine, terrified or excited. It's not nearly as bad as one's mind might make it seem.
@DrewTombs3 жыл бұрын
I was always overprepared and found so much of my planning went to waste (though I've since recycled some things that were not used initially). Now, I only really plan for the current trajectory of the party and have a loose-but-adaptable plotline for the overarching story.
@MrGBH3 жыл бұрын
I'm making my game world and initial campaign concepts into an RPG, so anything I plan that goes to waste is still getting use
@soulfirez42703 жыл бұрын
I always end my sessions with asking what the players intend on doing ( where they are going to go next with the intent of doing what ever ) so that I can prepare only those things with a few extra bits that can be rotated infront of the players if I need to try and hook them in certain directions .
@DrewTombs2 жыл бұрын
@Soul Firez that's what I've learned to start doing as well. Makes things so much easier. Especially now the druid is level 11 and has access to Transport Via Plants 😂
@destructionindustries1987 Жыл бұрын
Fantastic
@DrewTombs Жыл бұрын
They're all level 17 now so now more than ever my plans are incredible loose, because they can just "nope" their way through most things 😂😭
@anastasiawilford27703 жыл бұрын
Common misconception: the primary purpose of corn fields is for pilots-in-training to crash into. Harvesting only happens as a byproduct and corn prices are as low as they are because of a lack of interest in piloting 😁👍
@calvinjohnson62422 жыл бұрын
That’s why popcorn pops. It is genetically engineered for cushioning the fall of planes.
@StrazdasLT2 жыл бұрын
Yes, we should encourage more pilots to get trained so we could avoid tthe liquid poison that is corn syrup.
@TheReZisTLust11 ай бұрын
@@calvinjohnson6242 the fire helps activate the cushions, it all makes sense
@Curator_Crow3 жыл бұрын
I'm currently writing a new campaign, and one of my players (a DM of a couple of our other games) decided to send me this video. I'm feeling called out but it was extremely helpful in putting a couple things into perspective. Cheers!
@bonbondurjdr65533 жыл бұрын
Your job as the GM: set up a string of situations, hold a coherent, fantastical world, force the players to act. How to be a player: ask yourself what you would do as your character because he is defined by his actions, aslways state intent and approach. The GM decides when the players roll the dice: when there's a chance of success, a chance of failure, and a consequence for that failure, the dice are rolled to determine the rest of the story. Be fair, telegraph most everything, and tell your players why they are rolling the dice. Your GM lexicon: conflict, opportunity, danger, call to action, fellowship, motivation, arbitration, and tags. Your best tools: Maze Rats random tables, Godbound random tables, and ICRPG. GM reading list: Trap Theory video by Runehammer, the AngryGM's book or his articles about GMing, Basically, SlyFlourish's Lazy Dungeon Master book, and The Monsters Know What They're Doing by Keith Ammann. DM Lair as well, obviously! ;P *And know this: you're NEVER going to be perfect, we simply can't and we keep learning forever, so stop worrying and get into the fray because you'll have a hell of a lot of fun. And Luke (Lucas? I don't hear it well.) is right, your players aren't judging you as much as you think they would, they'rej ust busy having a good time. Oh, and steal. Steal, steal, steal good and interesting ideas, you're now part of the coolest club ever: all that advice above? I stole it from the sources I've shared, it's a pleasure for us GMs to have our ideas, adventures, traps, and even advice stolen for somebody else's table. GLHF!* :D
@nickwilliams83023 жыл бұрын
Thought I'd see Angry in your list of resources after you brought up "intent and approach" (which I agree is key). If I could give a new GM only one piece of advice, it would be to read the Angry GM blog. There's just no one else who breaks down the fundamentals quite as well. And a hell of a lot of people (Luke's a notable exception) who don't even try.
@VictoriaMorganawesometori3 жыл бұрын
I've been a GM for a few years and always good to hear tips, and your first tip is already fantastic!
@beaujacquier25143 жыл бұрын
Not sure about flavors but the 12 types of asparagus are Green, White, Purple, Wild, Apollo, Atlas, Jersey series, Mary Washington, Precoce D’Argenteuil, Purple Passion, UC 157 and Viking KB3.
@schwarzerritter57243 жыл бұрын
Also the head tastes different, so that is 24 flavours.
@nathangilbreath7884 ай бұрын
@@beaujacquier2514 I think you may have that mixed up with another green plant
@poetrywithbennit3 жыл бұрын
This helped a lot, it's actually my second time but you cleared up ALOT of my errors and anxieties! Thanks :)
@soulfirez42703 жыл бұрын
Relax and enjoy , I would remind you to shine the spot light on each of the players to give them all there moment to do something cool or just important to the story ,as its there story , its your plot but its your characters story .
@bigbuddhamech3 жыл бұрын
This is a fantastic video man. I needed something like this to send my players who want to start their own games but are getting over that initial first hump of anxiety/fear to get started.
@theDMLair3 жыл бұрын
Awesome! Happy to be able to help.
@joaooctaviopereiraneto3837 Жыл бұрын
I'm a beginner Brazilian master and day after day I fall more in love with your content Thank you very much for these pearls of learning Forgive me for my bad English :D
@goliathcleric3 жыл бұрын
You just had to say it... Here ya go: The 9 flavors of asparagus (yes, these are just ways of cooking it): 1) Grilled 2) Sauteed 3) Roasted 4) Creamed 5) Puree 6) As part of a gross "nutrient shake" 7) Steamed 8) Raw 9) Broiled
@lwnasidh3 жыл бұрын
My grandmother used to boil it too, so the list of ways of cooking it is even incomplete.
@RottenRogerDM3 жыл бұрын
10. Uneaten. The best flavor.
@andr3wbrowyn3 ай бұрын
@@goliathcleric I was thinking: 1. Slashing 2. Bludgeoning 3. Poison 4. Fire 5. Cold 6. Psychic 7. Force 8. Radiant 9. Necrotic
@apparition6683 жыл бұрын
I have a safe phrase for my players when they're about to do something silly. When they hear, "Are you sure you want to do that?" they know the choice they're contemplating has a high chance of very unpleasant consequences. Sometimes, however, they do it anyway. =)
@theophrastusbombastus13593 жыл бұрын
The most terrifying things I ever utter to my players are: "Are you sure...?" And: "You can certainly _try._ "
@FlameUser642 жыл бұрын
@@theophrastusbombastus1359 "You can try" is fine if you only use it to warn players about bad ideas. Just don't do that to poor innocent players when they ask if they can attempt _anything at all ever._ I've had that DM! Twice! It's not fun! It results in a game where as a player I feel too intimidated to take much action at all, nevermind play the seemingly-reckless, semi-calculated-risks swashbuckling types I want to play. Don't try to fake players out with that _or_ with asking "Are you sure" for reasonable tasks. Remember that the players don't always have all the same information on the world or even their immediate surroundings that you do as a DM. They're not in that environment, they don't have the luxuries of sight and hearing and touch that their characters do, and they're not familiar with their characters' bodies the way their characters would be. And they're not familiar with the world itself the way the characters would be, having lived in it all their lives! So don't fake the players out unless it makes sense to (such as illusions or a foreign civilization being involved so the characters are just as out of their depth as the players, for example).
@theophrastusbombastus13592 жыл бұрын
@@FlameUser64 You maybe didn't read the original comment, but certainly sound advice nonetheless 😎 Thank you for taking the time to share your story.
@FlameUser642 жыл бұрын
@@theophrastusbombastus1359 No, I did, I just wanted to put that out there anyway, heh. I just feel fairly passionately about that particular phrase because, yeah.
@StrazdasLT2 жыл бұрын
@@FlameUser64 I always tell the players they can try anything ever. The dice will decide if its possible. and in some cases the negative modifiers will simply make it impossible. Theres always the chance of rolling two nat criticals in a row though.
@ikjman12 жыл бұрын
For planning. We always plan 3 sessions ahead, we aim to do a session every month. We have found out that planning 3 months ahead is the sweat spot for us to make sure we can have a monthly session in a group of 6 players and a DM.
@mingbritson4 ай бұрын
So glad I just found your channel -- 30+ years playing (off and on) and now soemtimes DM -- appreciate all your stuff SO MUCH -- thanks, man!
@AbyssalDrake883 жыл бұрын
I still struggle with number five. I have thought all of those things after about half of my sessions. But they do keep coming back, they do seem like they're having a good time, so I try not to worry as much. It's been helpful that some players will stay after a bit and we talk about the session, what we thought went right and what went wrong, so that's been good.
@AnubisEternally2 жыл бұрын
I'm a new DM with my group playing a basic D&D campaign from D&D beyond. These are amazing tips! I've been super nervous but so far it's been really fun and I've been looking into possibly creating my own homebrew campaign.
@davidmc84782 жыл бұрын
Awesome tips. Don’t be afraid to DM, the DM’s standards for the experience they generate are always higher than the players’.
@Squiddles80726 ай бұрын
I genuinely LOVE all of your videos, they are so helpful, and they have actually gotten me a group that always comes back eagerly. Thank you soooooooo much!
@MrViperashes Жыл бұрын
Long time player finally running my first game with a coworker and his young sons. We rolled character sheets as a separate event and plan to play our first Golden Vault game next week. I’m really excited to get to help them build the world they want to live in, and this video really helped me seat my confidence in my readiness and ability to make this game fun for them.
@MrViperashes Жыл бұрын
One of my players is a 6yo that decided on Warlock and it threw me for a loop initially. After this video, I’m realizing I can “gift” him his patron with loot during the opening session of our campaign instead of expecting him to be able to choose one.
@Dhragon2 жыл бұрын
I've been playing and DM'ing for almost 40 years now and I really like the format of your videos. I've got some friends or family that are thinking about trying their hand "behind the screen" and I think your videos will help me, help them. I don't want to teach them how I run a game, I want them to find their own style. I play a wide variety of pen and paper RPG's and I really enjoy see different styles of story telling. Much appreciate the work you've put into these.
@courtneyoverbey33002 жыл бұрын
As a new/very inexperienced DM, you have given me a lot of things to consider. My last group fell apart due to holidays and schedule changes. Hopefully we'll get to start back up soon.
@cromax66611 ай бұрын
I've bumped into this video and for me as an experienced GM (35 years in RPG) this list is great. Perfectly summarizes all points for new and experienced GMs!
@jonashansen63913 жыл бұрын
The Dice touching thing is on page 235 of the DMG. "Don't touch others' dice if they're sensitive about it." That is, if we are thinking of the same quote.
@MannonMartin3 жыл бұрын
It never even occurred to me that anyone WOULDN'T be sensitive about it... Why would you want someone else touching your dice without asking? Not grabbing and touching other people's things without permission is just common courtesy isn't it? It's just polite. It's not even about dice.
@jonashansen63913 жыл бұрын
@@MannonMartin I mean... it IS very sus behaviour haha. I just think that including it in the DMG is like swatting houseflies with cricket bats. A bit over the top imo.
@minnion28713 жыл бұрын
@@MannonMartin Agreed, it's just like anything.... It's rude to touch other peoples stuff without permission... Dice included... or trading cards... or pawns...
@StrazdasLT2 жыл бұрын
Solution: just use virtual dice. No touching involved.
@nick46762 жыл бұрын
Being a relatively new DM it feels good to hear that if they come back they are enjoying it enough. Thanks for that !!
@rogthepirate45932 жыл бұрын
I agree on almost everything. Except the rules-as-written point. I've played with some house rules since day 1 - for instance ignoring XP and using a milestone system for levelling up instead (which I haven't regretted even once). Of course it does come down to how well you do know the more common rules when you start. I've played a few adventures in my group as a player before I became our de-facto DM (The others enjoyed my style best, I guess, plus I go all out with printing minis, making terrain and props and the like and they love that haha), so I already had a decent understanding of what worked well in our group and what didn't. So I'd say it depends. For someome completely out of their depth initially, it's probably a good idea to stick to the rules exactly, but if you feel comfortable with it, having house rules from the get-go can totally work.
@cleothemuse Жыл бұрын
Also depends on if you prefer some things from earlier rulesets. There's a lot in 5e I don't like compared to 3.5e and a lot that felt missing, so house rules to the rescue.
@rico3052 Жыл бұрын
Just started DMing my first adventure. Gotta say, these are all things I know just rationally from being a player. Still, hearing them addressed directly definitely helps with some of the pressure. I really appreciate this video. And the wealth of resources on your channel I have to dig through still.
@stephenwells24643 жыл бұрын
13:47 I don’t care if people touch my dice unless it was Wil Wheaton
@jackseale41975 ай бұрын
About a year ago, I began running a campaign for my family as my first trial run in 5e. This video was incredibly helpful. Failure is inevitable. As a player and a DM. I love this mindset. It has all been a learning process. And I've never failed more fantastically than this first run. My advice, full send it. Try it out amd dive in head first. Failure is learning. DM's roll nat. 1's too. Once you accept that, you can't have a bad time
@LordOfMetal6663 жыл бұрын
Actually good advice that will save you days and days of trial and error to figure this out on your own. Good video!
@lwnasidh3 жыл бұрын
I prefer green asparagus to white, but like both. I'd rather have it steamed, but I'm not opposed to grilled or even boiled, if there's no other option. All it really needs is a little salt and pepper to bring out the flavor of the asparagus. Adding too many spices just overwhelms the natural taste.
@patguardiola41303 жыл бұрын
Everything important has been said by this man! But try lemon on your asparagus... it´s a completely new level.
@theDMLair3 жыл бұрын
I think I really only ever had boiled or grilled asparagus. And then we just put salt I think on it. I like the flavor though. Don't need to add anything to it to
@patguardiola41303 жыл бұрын
@@theDMLair Nothing more heartlifting than having a conversation about asparagus with a great DnD-content creator 😄
@lozerette2 жыл бұрын
Ok, but hear me out: bacon-wrapped asparagus.
@diamondflaw2 жыл бұрын
10:45 - Behold, the plot hook for "The Gamers: Dorkness Rising"
I started a D&D group 6 months ago. Im DMing the Lost Mine Of Phandelver. Its been an awesome experience. I make a lot of mistakes, but i get a tad better every time, and my group is merciful. I just try to prep, and be as consistsnt as i can. The advice in the book that says "when in doubt, make up the rules" has been a major help...If i make a mistake, they are none the wiser and i fix it the next time around.
@viniciusfrj3 жыл бұрын
"DnD is not DM vs Players", yeah, tell that to our table lol. We have a running gag that we are always scoring points against the DM and he on us when any makes a question or statement where the other stumbles to or can't answer. DM: "you're standing in your tavern..." Player: "What's the name of the keeper?" DM: "..." Players: "OH YEAH, WE'RE WINNING DND"
@StrazdasLT2 жыл бұрын
Any important characters i prepare names and even thier sheets beforehand.A tavern keeper? yeah id just make something up on the spot. your inkeeper is Vasylyj, an immigrant from the east who came here as a child and started his own business. And i just stole his personality from a rat exterminator in a tv show The Strain.
@KnicKnac3 жыл бұрын
My main DM used a dry erase map and dice for enemies. We as players could use minis or whatever. I used a putting green coin or small shiny rock. Didn't bother us to busy having fun.
@nimric33483 жыл бұрын
My tips A book of dry erase battle maps( like 20 maps) is the best thing I've ever bought. Have ideas for a plot line but don't push it forward, prepare locations, npc and there goals. Don't railroad let the players decide what to do and think how the world reacts. Try to prompt close to the end of the session the players plan for next session Create combat shortcuts for yourself you could use average damage, roll all attack rolls at one, don't keep track of all hit points on some make them die after so many hits or just decide when.
@schwarzerritter57243 жыл бұрын
What is a book of dry erase battle maps?
@nimric33483 жыл бұрын
I love it so much I'm getting the creators volume 2 map set. Easily the best accessory I've ever bought for dnd
@schwarzerritter57243 жыл бұрын
@@nimric3348 okay, but what is it?
@nimric33483 жыл бұрын
It's a collection of themed dry erase battle grids, you can draw maps on them or use the base themes. Like beach, forest, city ect.
@schwarzerritter57243 жыл бұрын
@@nimric3348 That sounds convenient. I probably would have used some PVC tablecloth.
@Jaymy58010 ай бұрын
Just come across this video as me and a small group are looking in to starting a campaign for the first time. I'm going to be giving DM a shot and this video has been incredibly helpful!
@XX-cx7rt2 жыл бұрын
As of now, I feel personally attacked and called out by tips 1, 3, and 5. Lol! I used to write novels **for fun**; granted, I'd never tried to have any of them published, but making sure that what I'm creating is fleshed out with no plot holes, and is something that everyone will enjoy AND be able to critique is one of my biggest "perfectionist" moments. I struggle with enjoying having fun myself in positions of authority because I'm too busy trying so hard to be perfect. Edit: On the dice touching debate; I'd say it depends on the dice. A $10 set of dice you can get at your local game store? Sure no problem. A $100 tempered glass set that my best friend got me on my birthday to also commemorate our year long friendship? No, absolutely not. Hands off. 2nd Edit: "There are no winners or losers in D&D." This is blatantly incorrect. You see, when everyone gets together and has a good time, then everyone is a winner! :3
@sammipraul3446 Жыл бұрын
running my first one-shot today, first time DMing. found this super helpful!!
@jonathanherman34793 жыл бұрын
Definitely good tips to remember 👌 even for experienced DMs
@1.red.panda.1 Жыл бұрын
One thing that really helped me as a new DM with players who are new to the game is starting out on an island. I don’t have to do too much prep work for things like that and they don’t have too much decision paralysis when it comes to what direction they need to go to. Also I’d recommend watching yters play first since even watching one campaign can really set you up strong on how to play.
@irenewijman47423 жыл бұрын
For those interested, here is my way to long experience of the past 4 months. As a little bit of background, I started playing about 2 years ago and haven't played as much as I would have liked (something about a pandemic, idk?) and decided a couple months ago I wanted to try DM'ing as my previous DM was strapped for time and cut his campaign short. Decided to start with Lost Mines of Phandelver to get a feel for the trade while making my own entire world from scratch (I have a pantheon I'm decently happy with but might scratch and redo the world map, it's a long-term thing hence the module). TLDR: trust your players with a bit of freedom, roll with their decisions, don't pull your punches with monsters that 'seem' too strong out of fear one of the players may go down, let them. Make mistakes, it's the fastest way to learn. I got a 3D printer for mini's, then a second one (first was filament, second is resin for better quality). Only do this if you want an extra hobby, it takes up a lot of time and especially resin printing has a bit of a learning curve, but wow do they look good on the table. Having your own means of producing mini's also allows for a lot of flexibility in what monsters and other things to throw at your players. I gave my players quite a bit of freedom with their characters, one is a dragonborn with wings and a tail, he doesn't use them functionally, though I might allow him to eventually. This was justified in his backstory as being experimented upon by the Cult of the Dragon. I also have a fairy barbarian, by one of my experienced players, this was before fairies were offically released. I gave the wizard a ram with the stats of a Nyx fleece Ram, which is utterly to strong as a familiar, but the ram is the husband of the fairy and the roleplay between me as the ram, the fairy and the wizard is absolutely hillarious. Lastly, I have two nobles, one paladin/warlock and one draconic sorceror. The freedom I gave my players has turned out fantastic as all of them are more interested in playing an interesting character rather than metagaming. Funny things that happened so far in the campaign: both the fairy barbarian and the dragonborn barbarian absolutely fail at opening doors, they have become the bane of my player's exsistance. They convinced the Redbrands to clear out of the cellars of Tressendar Manor, to avoid being utterly obliderated, aided by the scene of the dragonborn kicking in a door (the only one that would be kicked in) holding a Redbrand up by the throat and the warlock slicing their neck as a statement (great rollplaying ensued). They are now potential allies and the party hired one of them, named Cole, to be a guide to Thundertree. Cole has never really done much adventuring, and roling incredibly low several times he now officially has PTSD from all the monsters he's seen these insane people fight against. He's become the guide/cook/nanny to the fairy's 4 baby mimics, found during a session 0.5 to give my players a 'prologue' to their story and why/how they know eachother. Some things I learned: I have been to nice to my players. i had them start at lvl 3 because I personally dislike lvl 1 and 2 and I have been pulling punches when it comes to monsters with multi attack. I have now decided to stop that, underscored by a spontaneous 'gauntlet' we decided to do as we reached a plot point for an absent player and cut the session short. The monsters i threw at them they had already fought before, but now with multi attack and such. They did fine. During one session we had a guest player. One of my players decided they wanted to go back a bit to try open 'The Door' again. I should have cut this off before it started or after his first failed attempt and not gone on for 1.5 hours, it wasn't fun for the guest and we could have done this some other time. One of my players is an 'audience memeber', he made the sorcerer because the other player made a warlock and they would play off each other as the characters are brothers, the idea being they could help each other with certain skill checks. The player unfortunately doesn't know what to do with this character and during a great oppurtunity for some character development and roleplaying he completely shut down. When I or the warlock player brought this up, things didn't go so well, this player also copes with some mental problems which, I admit, I have no idea how to deal with. For the forseable future i will leave him to be an audience member, maybe prod him again in a few months if he's feeling better. Thanks for reading, hope you found it useful or at least entertaining!
@Taterbug19892 жыл бұрын
The nine flavors of asparagus, ranked from worst to best, are... 9. Canned ~ Asparagus from a can is disgusting. Period. 8. Mushy ~ The result of over-cooking in water. The best that can be said for this is that it's not canned. Often results from trying to get the fat ends of large stalks tender enough to eat. 7. Raw ~Just eat it. At least it's fresh 6. Burnt ~ The result of over-cooking in a skillet or on the grill. Better than mushy, but still needs work. Watch your cooking times! 5. In a casserole ~ Add sausage and cheese. Bake. Pretty good! 4. In a soup ~ Combine with sausage, cheese, chicken broth, and a little bit of kale. Cook in the instant pot. Delicious! 3. Steamed ~ Lightly cooked in a small amount of boiling water. Add butter, salt, and a hint of lemon juice. DON'T OVERCOOK! 2. Chocolate-covered ~ I haven't actually tried this yet, but I'm certain it's fantastic because... chocolate. And the best flavor of asparagus... 1. Grilled / Seared ~ cook over charcoal or in a skillet, add butter, salt, and lemon, and serve next to a rare steak and a baked potato. Absolute perfection!
@EvanChaosChamber Жыл бұрын
I'm new to DMing and yes, I dis the exact thing you said at the start.. I said, damn, I'm a new DM and need help, so KZbin it is. Great advice for new and old DMs. Ill be creating content about my journey as a new DM. Ill definitely link to this video! Thanks for the advice.
@aaronvincent8162 жыл бұрын
This is huge, thank you so much for the tips. Starting my first campaign in a few weeks and I’m super nervous and a bit overwhelmed. Thankfully I know my players well and we should have a good time regardless
@frankcoleman31732 жыл бұрын
New Dm and running lost mines of phandelver, really having fun and want to praise people like you who have provided superb information and dnd common sense. Thanks!
@trumanway3763 Жыл бұрын
I just ran my first one shot and am looking forward to running my first campaign, and i must say it is a really good start. If gives you good practice for dungeon design and how to guide your players to interact with your world but not feeling overly stressed.
@thehuntertyranni74976 ай бұрын
My wife is studying to be a first time dm, NO DND EXPERIENCE, she's currently taking notes from the 5e dm guide book. So ready to see how this one shot turns out
@frost598Ай бұрын
Ive been binging all the content for new DM's even joined the discord, and I'm starting to feel better about my first time DMing or even playing the game, so thank you (:
@angieboolovesalot8581 Жыл бұрын
Man as a new DM binging your videos is a life saver. Luckily my players are all super chill and just in it for some fun escapism and know full well I only even played part of one campaign before jumping in to DMing but still. Wanna do well for them and all these tips help.
@cesarpanda7 ай бұрын
"Your players aren't judging as hard as you think they are"... Straight to the heart. Thanks.
@stumboz5566Ай бұрын
Strongly agree with the one town/single setting approach. I got so overwhelmed trying to prep everything just for my players to skip half of it. So I wrote an entire adventure that just takes place at a house in the woods. One indoor map, one outdoor map and improvise the rest. It went sooooo smooth for everyone.
@kaylaa2204Ай бұрын
3:00 I like to, if I have a continent map, zoom in on one of the large hexes and break it down into smaller hexes to make a regional map. If I don’t have a continent map, I either make one, or I don’t, in which case I just zoom in the same way, and that is a region of a potential continent. That I will make later. Or maybe you don’t even need that continent map because your entire campaign will take place within the boundaries of a kingdom. But no matter what you do, you only want to prep the starting area and the immediate surrounding region.
@AAAndrew2 жыл бұрын
I'm only six sessions into my first campaign and these suggestions are already quite useful.
@SonOfSofaman3 жыл бұрын
Every one of these points is a gold nugget of timeless advice. You shared many of these points with me a couple years ago and I've been running a game and having fun ever since.
@failboy1179 ай бұрын
I’m doing a heavily home brew campaign and it’s been really fun. My players enjoy the combat and the characters. I’m a first time DM, but my friend who has been DMing us for almost 10 years who is one of the players said I’m doing really well. And honestly I’m mostly winging it. I go in with a plan, they do something funny and dumb, it changes the course, and we have more fun by changing the plan based on their actions. It’s fun for them and myself
@trestrece3133 ай бұрын
I played D&D at uni a looong time ago and ever since i wanted to play again but no one wants to be a DM. I have finally gathered the courage to become a DM and in september i have my first session, needless to say im scared AF but hey now i discover this amazing channel and vid, ill take all the advice i can. Thank you!
@jeffbradstreet98652 жыл бұрын
I have watched a few of your videos and I really appreciate how you point out the difference between a game and a show. I don't expect to have my games run or feel like one. I don't have the resources and time. Thank you for being down to earth for noob DM's.
@Vecronix2 жыл бұрын
Ran a game last night for the first time, one was a new player that never played before, the other 4 were DM's that have been running the game for 10+ years each. No pressure, it was a great time. I am also happy that I know if I did suck... they would definitely tell me. We are running Lost Mine of Phandelver.
@Cat-rq9dm2 жыл бұрын
I've just started DMing for my first campaign a few months ago, and this really eased a lot of my anxiety around it, still. Thank you LOL
@JeffJohnson-bx5df Жыл бұрын
1.) Green asparagus 2.) White asparagus 3.) Purple passion asparagus 4.) Wild asparagus 5.) Jersey giant asparagus 6 ) Precoces D'argenteuil Asparagus 7. ) Apollo asparagus 8.) Mary washibgton asparagus 9.) Atlas asparagus 10. Viking KB3 Asparagus Thank you for the advice I will hopefully be running my own game for the first time soon! Will check out your resources. Liked and subscribed.
@Test-UCKC2 жыл бұрын
I've been running games at home for my family and their primary experience is in my game. Now my sister is wanting to DM a game but she's scared we may not like it or so on. This video is absolutely perfect and I need to show her, hell it's even helped me with the way i think. Thank You!
@derekfarmer3803 Жыл бұрын
This is amazing, I just started my first campaign as a DM last month and your videos have helped so much! And the offense is the funniest but most truthful parts of your videos, keep it up lmao
@theDMLair Жыл бұрын
Awesome, so happy to help! 😁
@magickalbayrabbit996Ай бұрын
I'm a 45 yr old whose played RPGs since my mid teens. Now that my son is a teenager he's getting into DND, and though I just started watching you tonight you've helped me so much ❤
@neilhenderson66023 жыл бұрын
This is just a fantastic reassuring video. I started DMing again after forty, count them, forty years and it’s been all kinds of challenging. I’m enjoying it but I need advice and uploads like these are making it so much easier.
@theDMLair3 жыл бұрын
Awesome so very happy to help! Swing by our live streams to if you have any questions. We have q&a in a live streams almost every week
@neilhenderson66023 жыл бұрын
@@theDMLair Sadly I'm in the wrong timezone but what I've taken to doing is replaying them while I paint my minis for the next session. They are very good too, lots of excellent DM tips.
@kratosdertoten40358 күн бұрын
As a new player currently in a campaign, I've been looking into learning how to dm (even if just for one shots) so our current dm can play. For reference we use DnD beyond and having just recently learned how to play a few weeks ago jumping straight into DMing is daunting. Mentally and monetarily, so much to learn and so much I would need to buy.
@wilsonjonah Жыл бұрын
Luke, thanks so much for this video! Your number 9 tip completely changed how I look at being a DM... I've been wanting to run an adventure myself for ages, but I've always bene so so nervous about doing it. But with these tips in mind, I feel infinitely more at ease with DMing my first game. Happy New Year, man!
@RocketCouch3 жыл бұрын
To your third point, about starting small, I definitely agree for the most part, but there is something that does bug me about that technique. Mind you this is more of a pet peeve of mine, so maybe take it with a grain of salt. The issue I have with only developing the starting area is your players' characters. For the most part, they've all probably grown up in this world you're creating, and even if they're the lowest of peasants, they'll probably still have a vague sense of the world's geography. To that end, it might be helpful to come up with a general layout for a world map (online map generators can help with that), place a few dots around the world, pick one to be your capital, and another to be your starting area. You probably wouldn't need more than that to start off. A bit of a bonus to this is that as your map evolves and develops, you can sometimes get some kind of quest idea or world building detail from certain features on it.
@cathryntruebloood39132 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much I was feeling great anxiety as I just signed myself up to run a one shot on Oct. 1st. I was feeling like Oh MY GOSH I am not going to be good at doing this. I do thank you for your video because it calmed my anxiety and reminded me that at the end of the day this is for fun, my fun the other player's fun everything else will be ok.
@asimplemage58122 жыл бұрын
I randomly picked it up one day just to see if I could do it. Turns out I can. Now I'm a forever dm and it's a blast. You really do just got to jump into it.
@RealWorldGames2 жыл бұрын
I've seen many videos regarding " universal" rules for DMing. This is by far the best. All 15 are good "rules" backed by sound reasoning. EXCELLENT VIDEO!!! Thank you. - DM of 30 years , Player of 38 years.
@joeharvey55562 жыл бұрын
I played dnd 5yrs when younger. New to 5e cimbat spells etc .. have 7 ppl want me to dm.. i still feel green. What do you recommend? More reading? Play abit? Just go at it? I have made a homebrew with module and map...plot etc Want to try new ideas. Im weak with combat technicals . Just womdering when i should start I think im gojng to reduce the people to 6 maybe 5 This group is very skilled but they like my creativity and enthusiasm. Any warnings or ideas . Thanks
@RealWorldGames2 жыл бұрын
@@joeharvey5556 I'm not a big fan of 5e, but to each their own. My best advice is to become very familiar with the rules of the game and play with those rules before attempting to homebrew your own. If you understand how the rules work and why they are written the way they are , you are more equipped to change rules without disrupting the balance of play. Ex. I run a 3.5e homebrew variant. In this homebrew I have changed armor to provide a lesser AC bonus but added damage reduction , ablation and repair rules. This change required me to make changes to the 2nd level spell Make Whole. My familiarity with 3.5 alerted me to this necessity prior to it becoming a game balance issue. My other reason for suggestion a greater understanding of the rules system is to prevent to " more experienced" players from attempting to "game the system" or " rules lawyer" into a game imbalance situation. Imagine a player intentionally misinterpreting the way a feat or skill operates and insisting that it works in such a way that grants that character a game breaking advantage. If you aren't familiar with how the rules work you might be inclined to agree for the sake of game expediency. Later , when you discover how the feat or skill actually operates , restoring the balance could lead to an argument or a salty player who believes you were " nerfing " their character. So my advice is to play more, then world build , then DM. I believe following this system will lead to a more professional DMing experience.
@joeharvey55562 жыл бұрын
@@RealWorldGames i think i meant homebrew adventure not rules etc.. im not manipulating rules or stuff until my players would allow it..for example small sample When we played 2.0, way back we would allow unlimited levels for all races and classes. No restrictions. All levels could climb to 30th level and beyond. This was awesime because many never went past level 14 in our other groups. We had fun in gamma world, fighting minor gods etc etc.. Even our other friends who had level 60th characters would pick on us and we would win with rare amazing stories.. Lol.. it was rare amazing My 22 24 approx cleric magic user, killed a level 60th thief with his invisible 4th level pseudo drsgon. Poisioned him... the thief fell into coma after a horrible saving throw.. The group who still plays to this day from 1984 still probsbly says it was the funniest encounter ever. That thief did well over 400 damage per attack That even retired me.. i was given 32 million platinum to raise the thief plus some sweet artifacts. I retired him on an island with baba yogas hut? Spelling! Lol... thanks for ur help!! If u ever play on r20 or twitch i would love to join u guys fir a 3month tour.. Talk soon! The game can be so fun if the dm and players allow it
@joeharvey55562 жыл бұрын
U know 5e is really just dnd .. u could add any tables charts you want.. i couldmt stand it but it does help in many ways.dms d8ntnhave to memorize ac , charts etc math...
@bondeddy25022 жыл бұрын
Great advice for new DM’s and a great refresher for the more experienced. Sometimes we loose sight of the basics.
@xSling0x Жыл бұрын
I just started with my friends as the DM. NONE of us have ever played before (besides me with one single session when I was 10% awake). We are all having so much fun and I’m investing money into random props for the game. We’re learning the game as we go along and having a phenomenal time doing so. I wouldn’t be shocked if an experience DnD player saw us and went wtf are you doing it’s all wrong! We’re having fun and that’s the end goal
@cloverdog852 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the tips. I am going to be the teacher supervisor at the D&D club for the school I work at. I've never dmed before but I used to play when I was a teen. I'm hoping the kids will just take over but if needed I will get ready to act as DM when needed.
@michaelwood24162 жыл бұрын
I just want to say that I find your videos extremely helpful and insightful. In nearly every one that I watch, you make me think of something that I can incorporate into my own game. Something that I simply have never thought of before or a new way of doing something. And for that simple fact, I thank you.
@TheRealZiktus2 жыл бұрын
Late to the party, but thanks for passing on the knowledge. All of these tips are wonderfull for new DM's. In the years I've ran as a DM some of these tips stand out to me because it felt like very important lesons I've learned while DM'ing. 5. is a great realisation to have. Once you see your players having fun and coming back for more games, you know you're doing a good job as DM. You don't have to worry even if you mess up, which was one of my fears, you are often the only one who knows a mistake was even made in the first place, since only you have knowledge about what should have happened. So don't worry as long as everyone is having fun. 7. I'm currently 3 years into a weekly campaign and I sometimes still run a bad session. It's no big deal unless it happens more frequently. Whenever I feel I ran a bad game, I just ask my players about how they feel and point out what I think wasn't fun. Often they say it wasn't as bad as I think it was and when they feel the same as I do, we talk about how we could prevent whatever went wrong in the future and no one makes a big deal of it. 13. Sticking to a set time is key to having a good campaign. When it comes to canceling or rescheduling game sessions, our group has agreed that if at least half the players can't make it, we either reschedule if more than half can make it on another night that week, or cancel whenever that's not possible. This prevents me from having to cancel a lot more games when a single player can't make the session. This keeps at least the half of the group that did make it engaged and when they talk about the game, it draws in the players that missed the session again. 15. Be a fan of your PCs! Provide them with interesting scenarios that makes them feel like the heroes of the story that you are all telling together, instead of finding out ways to "win". If you are a fan of the PCs and they win and are excited or relieved because they barely pulled something risky off, you as a fan of the party win too, and everybody wins.
@CubaRican2262 жыл бұрын
Great info for new DMs. Glad I found your channel.
@AuntLoopy1232 жыл бұрын
I use colored cardboard (usually from my soft drinks boxes), and cut circles or squares of different colors (different flavors of soft drink), and put them on my map. I have better maps, now, but at first, I. just took a ruler and made my own grid. Sometimes, I use theater of the mind, but when I think things like magic spell arcs, circles, squares, and other things, need to be measured accurately (and to avoid arguments like, "But I thought we were closer than that!" from theater of the mind), I will use even the cheapest map, JUST to get proper measurements. That, and a ruler, and you can. manage. Better tools are better, but a ruler and paper, and some colored cardboard are all we really need for a very good combat encounter. I use colored twisty-ties (the kind you get on bread bags) to indicate different conditions. We have quite the collection of twisty-ties. They tended to be limited in colors, so I looked online, and found "party ties" used to tie up party bags, and they come in some very pretty colors, and even patterns, so I bought two whole packages of those, on a splurge. Eventually, after saving up for a while, I bought real plastic condition rings, that say what at the condition is, so I don't have to consult my color chart every time. But, if you're on a budget, and you don't mind consulting a color chart, just colored twisty-ties will do. You can also use colored string or yarn, or the plastic rings off of bottles (the ring that connects to the lid, and you have to twist and break the connection, to take off the lid). You can use different denominations of coins on top of the marker. You can use buttons on top of the marker. You can use all kinds of things. Just use your imagination, and you can have an accurate map for combat. You can even use 1/2" or 1/4" grids instead of 1" grids for your maps, and use really small markers for the PCs and enemies. As long as everyone can actually see it, it's OK. Or use 1" markers on whatever graph paper you have, and just count more, or mark your own lines on the graph paper. Heck, you could use a stick in the dirt to draw the grid, and sit outside, in the sunshine, moving your pretty pebbles and twigs around, and have an accurate map. Also, some sunshine and fresh air. Or, if you have a large lawn, and some time on your hands, use some twine or yarn, and some of those metal skewers, or even wire hangers that have been straightened and cut, and use them as stakes. Mark out an even grid all over your yard, with yarn or twine as the marker. Then, have your players STAND in their positions, and be their own minis! This can work great for those epic battles, especially if you get the neighborhood kids in to act as the BBEG's minions. PC: "I shoot Timmy with Magic Missile and do 22 points of damage." Timmy: "Oooooh! I'm dead! You killed me! Aaah! Ohhh! Aaargh!" :falls on the ground, twitching and kicking: "Gurgle! Mooooan! Bleeeeeeh!" Everyone applauds his Oscar-worthy death scene. I would recommend that you use tablets for your character sheets and an online dice roller for the yard-map, but yeah. It could totally be done.
@christopherbuckley11 Жыл бұрын
Lemon parm asparagus. Don’t know if it’s in the original 9 asparagui but it’s still my favorite
@Sheepinwolfsclothes Жыл бұрын
This video took a lot of weight off of me as a new DM and I gotta thank you a lot man
@mstack-kk9it2 жыл бұрын
Best D&D DM channel on KZbin. Can't wait for my books I ordered from his site to arrive! Luke is a stud. Bacon is delicious. Huzzah!
@HeatherVerhagen2 жыл бұрын
I've been meeting with my group every Saturday at 400pm to make characters and talk about the campaign we want to do. A lot of people haven't been showing up. Told them we could take a break until after Christmas. Hopefully that does the trick. Otherwise I've gonna have to have a little chat with people and possibly boot them. Definently having a learning experience re people not showing up or getting back to me. Thanks for the tips.
@franzcapoeira2 жыл бұрын
Number 9: I almost cried of joy when I saw this one. So many DMs that imagine a '"cool scend" and want to impose it onto the players as the conclusion to an adventure. Thank you for mentioning it, I feel not enough people do.
@matthijsclaessen81523 жыл бұрын
The (combat) rules are there for all the stuff you can’t just roleplay… Lesson 16? Whatever you make up on the spot… write it down. So next time they return to that spot ot will contain what you made up. Continuity is one of the few true tasks of the GM. Whether it’s your rulings or your world(s), make them consistent. (Thanks for the advice. 35 plus years of experience here… but it’s still welcome!)
@zartul3 жыл бұрын
Even to play with a grid, you don't need minis! You can just make a few round tokens with the PCs names and monsters name out of some kind of hard paper, and use some maps and grids made out of paper. Or even just sketch the map and grid with a pen, and let players mark their positions using pencils and when they move they just erase the previous marker. Coins, and dice can be great to substitute minis. As someone who had problems having access to miniatures for years, but always prefered playing with a grid, I can assure there are plenty of ways to do so without being cumbersome.
@JustAnotherPerson8113 жыл бұрын
I will also add: gummy bears: you beat the enemy, you get to eat the gummy.
@darksideofthephilosopher2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the encouragement and the help💜
@drivingmissmolly2 жыл бұрын
I am all about reusing stuff. My sister had all these dead disposable vapes and they were like square pillars, so I painted them dark green and covered them in hot glue and dipped them in rocks and sand and pebbles I got from the dollar store (I could have used river pebbles too for free) and they look JUST like cobbled pillars. And bonus, sometimes some sand will shed off and create more realistic rubble. I’ve recycled plastic bottle caps into bases for paper minis and glued terrain onto them like I did the pillars. I’ve also glued some together to make logs or barrels.
@littlewindstar Жыл бұрын
Private pilot here, can confirm that learning to perform a high-speed cornfield mowing is essential to flight school curriculum
@samanta_goodtime Жыл бұрын
I haven’t played in over a year. So I’m gonna try my hand at DMing in the next month or two and getting a few friends to try it out. Most of them are kinda nerdy and they seem like they might like the vibe, so we will see how it goes. I’ve never DMed and they’ve never played and to be completely honest, I love that combo, cuz they won’t have that many expectations of me. Because I’ve played with two different dms and I’ve watched a few videos I know what I need to prep and what I need to understand how it works from the DMs perspective. So wish me luck!