*Thanks for watching! Let us know what you do to prep before you games in the comments below!* Looking to create some awesome maps on the fly? Check our DungeonFog here:dgnfogaffiliateprogramme.sjv.io/jdQeZ
@ohyea84863 жыл бұрын
Hey guy, maybe I missed the link but where could we find the 121 and 122 format videos?
@Arc115YT3 жыл бұрын
@@ohyea8486 kzbin.info/www/bejne/ipOpgWqwfN6Zi9U Here you are, my friend. Enjoy!
@ohyea84863 жыл бұрын
@@Arc115YT thank you!
@mygeekdom44143 жыл бұрын
The idea of going around to each player asking them what they want to do is excellent. However, I use a laptop and software to help take care of a lot of book-keeping. So, I thought of implementing a house-rule saying that if the player doesn't give me a specific action, I will assume they are doing the same thing as last round. This house rule is especially firm during combat. I would specifically mention in my session 0.
@ganonbit3 жыл бұрын
Just a note, might want to reach out to them about their website. Their mobile site is pretty bad and near impossible to navigate
@CardboardCleric3 жыл бұрын
0:50 Plan your adventure in rough 3:38 Create NPC names 7:35 Say Never say no, say no but 11:40 Include your PCs 14:09 Read your group 17:27 Keep notes up to date
@helcometowell92953 жыл бұрын
tnx
@leonielson71383 жыл бұрын
I had a character named Johan Warwick at a convention, he was a Human Fighter Criminal with the Crossbow Expert feat. Only one of the DMs realized he was a riff on John Wick, replacing firearms with crossbows, and he thought it was awesome.
@ijsisglat3 жыл бұрын
"short video" still 20 minutes of lovely content!
@radred6093 жыл бұрын
it's still a short video if you watch at 2x speed :/
@Rotti173 жыл бұрын
@@radred609 and it's really long if you watch it at .25 speed
@avianographer3 жыл бұрын
"The five step method is just ten little steps..." Seems legit.
@marktaylor71623 жыл бұрын
Marketing fine print: "The five step method may require more steps than advertised."
@TheSmart-CasualGamer Жыл бұрын
"Talk to your GM about whether the Ten-Step Five-Step Process is right for you".
@notbloodylikely4817 Жыл бұрын
I tried the ten step method in five easy steps and lost 210 lbs.
@michaellehner33393 жыл бұрын
The "keep notes" was a mantra i followed closely for years. But i currently am a player in a group, where the GM does it even better: he actually keeps no notes at all. Instead, he insisted on the group doing one thing between the sessions: after each session, one of the players has to add to the groups written down history. For each session, another player is being selected, it's basically a round robin. (If if you are absent when it would be your turn, then it'll simply be your turn when you are along the next time...) The GMs reasoning also is quite plausible: not only can the group quickly recap on things in the past, he also gets an understanding on which part of the story we caught on, what he might have to hint towards a bit more in the next part and also can see what we found most interesting. Truth to be told, the first few months, most people considered it a chore. We only play once every four to six weeks, so it's not as many sessions as the "first few months" could make you believe. But on the other hand, the longer intervals actually turned out to be quite an advantage. While the first few additions to our units history (a mercenary unit in a SF setting) had a bit of a "now i have to write this" feeling, we quickly started upstaging each other. Even just considering that i by now wrote, were several pages of a diary, a military report, a kind of fairy tale, an annotated poem from the history monks and 10 pages of "screenplay" script for a kids TV series. (Very much along the line of Captain Future and Saber Riders. ) And to my shame i have to admit that this is not even top of the line, some others wrote texts which are far better than what i could ever do. [Although the very last addition we got, written completely in Latin, might actually be "slightly" over the top. It sure is "decorational", but not really accessible to all of the players. ] So yes, this might not be "the thing" for every group. But if you can seed your group with this task and spark the interest, it by far beats the notes a GM could ever make for himself.
@andrecanis48943 жыл бұрын
That sound great if everyone is having fun with it. But what happens with things the players don't know about? For example, if they get pick-pocketed on a busy street, and only see a shadow disappearing around a corner - but the GM knows who it was and where they went. I don't think it's realistic for the GM to keep *no notes at all*.
@michaellehner33393 жыл бұрын
@@andrecanis4894 What the GM does have and what he does prepare is a plan for what will (roughly) happen. But that's not the "keep notes while playing" part, but rather to prepare in advance and know the plot. To go for the example you gave: if the pick pocket matters and is connected to the plot, then where he went already is defined by it. No need to make new notes. If it is not connected to the plot at all, it will still be in the players diary, which our GM reads before each session. So if the pick pocketing was improvised, the solution can be improvised just as well in the next session, no need to write it down in length, as long as the players diary is of sufficient quality. And exactly for the example you gave: you can bet that somebody being stolen from will be noted down. At least in our group it seems like we players are extremely skilled for picking up and including even the smallest and most irrelevant detail of some really random and unimportant event, while at the same time missing out on the big things, which really matter for the plot. :D At least for our group it seems to work. The first few sessions the GM also still was writing down stuff. After a few sessions, when our reports increased in quality, he stopped doing that. (It's not that hard to notice, when the GM takes a 30 seconds break to put things to paper. ) Of course, it very much depends on the quality of what we players write and probably is not for every group. We also at the start did not do it well, only after it turned into a kind of internal competition (and some soft but very determined nudges from the GM), it really took off. So it definitely is not a thing for every group, but very much depends on having the right people at the table. Also, it really only works if you give people enough time in between. It would definitely not work on a weekly schedule, as not every week would give me enough time during the week to write something like that.
@diddy42413 жыл бұрын
My group does this and it's a lot of fun. Every player have their own unique style. My bard always tried to make it as good a story as possible and deliberately altered several details to make it a more interesting story.
@elwourmo9932 жыл бұрын
well i still keep notes, but I have've had a very good experience with having a randomly chosen player do a recap of the last session (pretty sure I picked that up from matt colville). this has three purposes 1. It allows players who missed the session be up to date. 2. I can see which parts, characters or points that player was most interested in so I know what to drop or what to fokus on (like if they mention an NPC alot I might give them a bigger part) and allows me to get a feeling for what a particular player enjoys. 3. If they don't bring up a plotpoint I feel is important I know to reiterate that during the session since I obviously didn't make it clear enough that a clue, Item or plothook was very important.
@stephaniegrehan9084 Жыл бұрын
One of our party, a couple days after our game, does a full recap for us and any absent players. At the start of each session we do a re-cap of Last Time on DnD! Super handy to remind everyone where we're up to, all the people we met, decisions left to be made. We can also use our chat during the week to make decisions.
@jobel1583 жыл бұрын
“Dooblie doo” I see you, Guy :)
@matthewjames75043 жыл бұрын
Does anyone know who first started saying dooblie doo? I first heard it from the guy on the PBS idea channel.
@7AngelicEnigma73 жыл бұрын
@@matthewjames7504 I thought it was John and Hank Green
@voarex3 жыл бұрын
@@matthewjames7504 First person I heard use it was matthew colville
@Somewheresouthof3 жыл бұрын
@@matthewjames7504 the real answer is Wheezy Waiter in the video " the point of yes return" from like 2009
@betci903 жыл бұрын
yes i was like omg colville yesss
@nanorider4263 жыл бұрын
Hi Guy. Veteran GM here. I use all the things you did talk about except that "Name list". That is brilliant! I'm stealing that. :)
@Past0rM4n3 жыл бұрын
GUY: "It's a short video, today, I promise" ME: *Checks the video length* Video Length: 21:36
@njflyersfan743 жыл бұрын
Of all the many DM advice channels on KZbin these days Guy's show in my opinion is the top bar, the real deal, his advice is the most useful to me.
@josephdellavecchia78283 жыл бұрын
Absolutely phenomenal video Guy. The tip with the names is pure gold and I never realized how easy it was till I paused the video and tried it myself.
@douglascole63863 жыл бұрын
As an educator, I am in awe of how your awesome principals could work in the classroom, you are one great teacher.
@PatricksTacticsTutorials3 жыл бұрын
Excellent video and suggestions, Guy. As a novice GM, I've been actively working through the catalog of videos! Our current Marvel Superheroes group awards bonus karma to players who write the session recap for the group an GM on our shared Google drive. With the added benefit of a professional cartoonist actively sketching vignette scenes from the session in real time, we are gifted with a wonderful comic book recap that we can refer back to fondly. Seeing my concept notes come to full narrative storytelling by the group effort is amazing as a GM.
@enoa43 жыл бұрын
Short video? Make 'em long. Your content is great. I look forward to it each week. Happy Gaming.
@calebpipping3 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for all of your videos. I’m 4 sessions into DMing for the first time and it’s going well because I have used your videos to help me have structured writing as well as inspire me to DM in the first place.
@georgesmith8273 жыл бұрын
I just started playing D&D about a month ago with a small group of friends. As a new player and a new DM I have been watching tons of videos and I have to say your videos are the BEST I have found! I really appreciate you sharing your expertise, it has greatly improved my preparation and enjoyment of the game.
@bellanbuutwitch18133 жыл бұрын
My first game as GM starts a week from tomorrow, iv been binge watching your videos and trying to take notes. Thank you for the great info, really really good stuff. I should mention iv only played D&D about 10 times on 3 years. Wish me luck
@MarkusWande3 жыл бұрын
I have a good tip for gaming. I don't know if you've maybe brought it up already ... but I'll share it anyway - and feel free to include the tip in any of your videos if you think it's good. I always make my players write a list of 10 things their PC does when nothing else is happening. For example; the dwarven warrior PC's list: ---------------------------------------------------------- 1- Polishing helmet 2-Polishing axe 3-Sharpening axe 4-Looking grumpy 5-Counting coins in purse 6-Eating 7-Taking a nap 8-Polishing shield 9-Repairing armor 10-Boasting about former heroics ---------------------------------------------------------- 2 advantages of this, as I see it. The players can use this opportunity of making the list as a time to help 'define' their character a little and it is also very practical for me, as the GM, during surprise encounters (or most anytime really)... -"Suddenly, the campsite is invaded by a group of trolls!! Alright, let's see what you are were doing at the moment..." *rolls D10* Works great for my player group. At times they also demand to make changes in their 'list'.. to reflect any new interest their chahracter might have gotten, or new equipment they adore, etc. Try it out in your player groups if you want!
@lindienelms22303 жыл бұрын
I just started DM’ing at the request of my groups usual DM. This channel has really helped me to feel comfortable doing this and given me loads of amazing tips and tricks. Everyone seems to be enjoying themselves so I owe you a huge thanks for sharing your knowledge!
@marek0110113 жыл бұрын
i would add one thing. give your players a handout before the game starts with general knowledge of the world, it's rules(if necessary) general layout, kingdoms, basic political situation, etc. it helps you as a DM and them a lot.
@alexwaddington98083 жыл бұрын
Loved all the plugs to previous videos, you don't always have to re-explain things 😁
@DarkLordShadaou3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the advice Guy ^-^ I'm DM'ing tonight and switching to using a laptop of my own notes instead of just the adventures information in whatever order it deems fit. Your advice gets me through a lot of smaller issues that should remain small issues and not become big ones that slow down a game. Thanks again ^-^
@Frederic_S3 жыл бұрын
A good tip for theater of the mind gm‘s like me: give maps a chance. You don’t have to play a table top strategy game. I sertanly don’t. But it helped my players a lot to visualise were they are and what they can do. And you don’t need to create them yourself. Just a 10-20 minute Google search will do the job. But (!) don’t try to find the perfect map. Find an evocativ map that inspires you and create your adventure around that map.
@TimelordPrime3 жыл бұрын
I am so amazed at your content, and love the help that even a seasoned GM like myself finds this useful.
@RagingWyvern3 жыл бұрын
I'm now putting a lord peman in my game
@LandonTheDM3 жыл бұрын
I liked this! I should include more names. I currently have a list of 10. I am trying to read my players a little better. I had one player say "it's sure nice to have some enemies that we don't have to worry about if we are doing the right thing to attack sometimes." That was a sign to me that I shouldn't turn every encounter into one where there is some reason to give pause or the enemy is just doing their job. Mixing in those encounters where it's a certain thing is a refreshing.
@edwarduribe29103 жыл бұрын
Really good tips. The taking notes is especially helpful. I generally rely on my memory and a picture of the scene
@raven-ce1rb3 жыл бұрын
Just found your channel when starting my first campaign with some friends, you’re a big inspiration and I love ur videos, keep it up !
@doktornowak97593 жыл бұрын
I FRIGGIN LOVE PEEMAN. He is now a main NPC in my campaign.
@tnttv53603 жыл бұрын
Yoh Guy. I am a roleplayer for nearly 20 years now. Your videos are still a great help, because there are some things you just dont look at, when you are playing with the same people all the time. And there are some things you just turn a blind eye to, after a bit of time. So yeah keep on making videos. They are a great help for beginners and a great reminder for veteran players.
@Parou2 жыл бұрын
I plan my rooms / locations in a small table each, which contain an identifier name at the top and all the obvious objects and materials in it. Then I write different things that absolutely can be done below it, so in case someone does something very similar to it, I have a guideline of what I want to say (because I am very bad at speaking freely), but I am perfectly open to them doing something entirely different that I did not actively plan as a possibility. I limit myself to one page in a Din A4 PDF per room and most often than not, one page is only half filled or in the case of a bigger area with lots of very small rooms, there are multiple room descriptions on one page. It causes me to write the most recent multi session adventure in a total of over 15 pages, but it really helps me to have some basic things I can mention and read to the players or collect specific information from for other actions. It also helps me to figure things out in the sessions easier, because my prewritten options give me a better sense of what is actually not as easily possible.
@homerthompson233 жыл бұрын
I have a scategories die in my dice collection. I call it my "random name generator" I just keep rolling it and writing down the letter. If I decide the next letter has to be a vowel then I roll a d6 (A, E, I, O, U, Y). It works great!
@thewackerly3 жыл бұрын
In regards to number 4, Index Card RPG Core literally says in the book that everything (except dialogue) happens in turn, in or out of combat. Back in my university days when I played QAGS, this was my bread and butter when "running" a game. (I say running a game, I was really just refereeing a sandbox.)
@rileyackison44953 жыл бұрын
I just started a new campaign and look forward to applying these.
@jpfernweh77713 жыл бұрын
Fantastic video. I've GM'd "a lot" but these are great reminders! Adding it to my list of videos to return to periodically 😃
@AlkanetEXE3 жыл бұрын
Game Master's Apprentice cards are wonderful for names. I bought them just for the random names on each card.
@MasterOfMadmen3 жыл бұрын
I just recently started GMing (again, but it's been over a decade since I last did and it was only for one short campaign). Your videos have been helpful at breaking concepts down into easy to understand bits. I just went to your site and bought your book. I'll probably eat it up before this weekend is through.
@jakegoodrich973 жыл бұрын
It has been tough with it being this year and playing online. My group most definitely has been more combat oriented but now I'm finding out some inner group drama that's going to be interesting to exploit
@jenschristensen17743 жыл бұрын
Firstly; THANK you for your constantly inspiring videos!! As an old player but first time GM insisting on trying to give other old players new experiences and an immersive story they want to see as a movie and thus making my own world, story and monsters to that end, this is an endless source of inspiration. I can't possibly express my gratitude (as I have run out of firstborns to give ...) ;o) Pre-Covid we usually played 10-12 hours (not including breaks) once a month. As I mainly sandbox that's requires tons of prep and diagrams to make sure the players end up where I want them. It's an art, but I love giving them the illusion of total freedom, and they love it too, after playing together for +25 years and me GM'ing for the first time :o) Currently we play 3 hours online (Discord) every second week. So much easier to prep
@tedgalacci84283 жыл бұрын
If your players are prone to analysis paralysis pause at the top of each combat round and ask the players each to make a basic decision of what they are going to do and to review any spell info they are going to need. Maybe even give them cards with the basic actions to place in front of them when they are ready.
@olemlund3 жыл бұрын
I don't do a lot of prep before each session, I only have a basic outline of the current adventure. I runn for a group where story and details aren't to important, it's enough if they get one good combat and some short interaction with the barman (hvo is the same barman for every single bar in the world, he is some sort of omnipresent demigod)
@hugofontes57083 жыл бұрын
Your videos are already usually great, but this series is particularly didactic Thank you, Guy :)
@j.g.90453 жыл бұрын
Somebody is a fan of Matt Colville, I see
@Ms_Succubus3 жыл бұрын
Recently I had a look at the ~"Gamemaster Book Guide Tip"-Thing for Pathfinder 2e... only to find out that almost EVERYTHING in it, is already covered by Guy. I went through the PDF like: "Yeaaa I know this, that and oooh what's that? Ohh, already knew about this aswell." Guy, you're a saint
@_bats_3 жыл бұрын
"The Five Step Method is 10 little..." D&D advice, direct to you from the Far Realm.
@nickschaefer93202 жыл бұрын
Bath and shower at the same time? That's some deep deep thought right there.
@marcosreed98943 жыл бұрын
I have come to really appreciate your advice and knowledge. Thank you for your efforts. You definitely made a fan who will utilize these rescources. Best regards from Seattle, Washington state. U.S.A.
@MagnusTheRedDog3 жыл бұрын
This might well be the best KZbin channel in existence.
@PumpkinPain3 жыл бұрын
Alternative Title: Learning life skills with Guy
@GeorgeHofmann23 жыл бұрын
The Peaman bit had me cracking up
@stamser3 жыл бұрын
Thank for the value of all your videos!!! (Guy, I have a confession to make ,just my opinion, the sessions From the Shadows Born ,at the begging it was 1 hour and I had the excitement for the next episode and I wanted mooore .Including me I wrote you for more hours of the sessions ,but then I realized it was wrong... 2 hours watching straight it was tough ,I lost 1 or 2 episodes and then i didnt know what was happening in the story so I left it.... So, you were right at the begging of the sessions to keep it 1 hour ... Just like The Wizards Of Carnbari (watched them twice
@JudithOpdebeeck3 жыл бұрын
for my first game i had a list of random npcs the village would have, so could just roll a dice to see who would be the werewolf or who would die next. ended up just picking the ones that worked best narratively. the list did help though
@originalatogscoins3 жыл бұрын
So, I have to say, how you are sitting in this video makes it look like those are someone else's hands most of the time. You know that comedy skit type thing where someone is behind you using their hands as their own. Hahaha makes me laugh just watching. I really enjoy the videos, keep up with the excellent work!
@johnbryce82674 ай бұрын
Tha "Doobly-Doo"!! haven't heard that for quite a while... kinda goes along with the "Blah-Blah".... LoL
@ShiyarokuBasil3 жыл бұрын
When you jokingly suggest something to the GM and you think it's so obvious that it's a joke and then the GM tells you: "I hope you are not disappointed if things don't go according to your plan. I'm the GM and I already know how I run the game. So just let me do it." I really wasn't sure what to think about that.
@danitenotes3 жыл бұрын
Great. Now I want to play Jihn Wono!
@Samuel-ib6vl3 жыл бұрын
Im starting GM and this videos help me so much
@gameram63823 жыл бұрын
There is a saying in the infantry no plan survive contact. Ie once the first bullet gose over yiur head its go to shit
@Sagetower73 жыл бұрын
18:42 Ahh yes 3am brainstorming somehow works better than it ever deserves to
@HienNguyenHMN3 жыл бұрын
"I wasn't taking the piss, pee-man."
@danieltilson40533 жыл бұрын
No plan survives first contact with the players. Doesn't matter if it's your plan, the player's plan, or the building plan for the building you're playing in. If that sentence just made you nervous about the ceiling over your head, you've probably been a GM and truly understand just how good the players are at destroying things.
@MrMuertoloco Жыл бұрын
For the names of my player's rivals i used an acronym Brianna Isabel Theresa Cheryl Hannah
@Pauzz853 жыл бұрын
Some years ago I found an article on the wizards website. It told to start Every session with a fight, to make the players reactive from the start. There must also be a plot reason for this fight. Maybe all the starting fights share a common evolving plot, apart from the main quest. What do You think of this method?
@SagaxCorvinus3 жыл бұрын
I say: don't take it for granted. If that's the thing your group likes, go on and have fun! :) Some people ― like me for example ―, however, will have the extreme opposite reaction: they'll take it as a signal meaning _"we're here to play advanced chess,"_ (depending on the game, of course) and immediately lose interest. :( Unless that's your party's thing, I suggest to avoid placing a fight for the sake of having a fight. If your group has a bigger focus on storytelling/role-playing, a fight should be a _mean_ to an _end,_ and not the end itself, if that makes sense. My two tips are: a) start by catching their interest, making them know what's going on and at the same time curious to find out what comes next; b) you won't be able to please everyone at the same time ― different people have different tastes.
@Tazymandius3 жыл бұрын
Having a fight at the start of every session will eventually screw up any cliff hanger moments you may want to set up. GM: You make your impassioned plea to the Baron, his staff look moved by your words, your party pat you on the shoulder for a job well done. The Baron rises to his feet, gently stroking his chin as he mulls over your words... And we'll leave it there till next week... PLAYER: Great... So he's going to completely ignore everything we said and fight us...
@ShamankingZuty3 жыл бұрын
I've been struggling a bit with point number 4. Not that I don't forget to hit on each player, but because other members at the table are more vocal and commandeer the game away from these other players. One of these players was actually dissuaded away from rejoining us because of it. How do I deal with this issue without coming across as an asshole to the people that are just excited about playing and scaring away the more timid players that get spoken over?
@jonduffin75603 жыл бұрын
Spotlight them - friend/family/rival from the past. Engineer a session where their character is more prevalent, maybe it will give them a boost. Also, talk to your players honestly. One of the people they played with felt bad enough about the situation not to join back in. Do they know that? Talk to them honestly and be like "we are all here to have fun, and I'm noticing the others aren't getting involved as much as you. Can you help me get them involved? Can you give them a little more room to be vocal?"
@ShamankingZuty3 жыл бұрын
@@jonduffin7560 Great suggestion. Thanks.
@SagaxCorvinus3 жыл бұрын
Jon is right. You can also engage the less spontaneous players directly, (NPCs begin dialogue with them, etc.) showing them that you care and that they will always have room in the game.
@ShamankingZuty3 жыл бұрын
@@SagaxCorvinus I will do that and for a few minutes they seem engaged, only for the vocal players to start performing actions and butting in again. If this weren't online, I feel like I'd have a much more control over the group. I've run games of up to 16 players in person with zero issues, but even just trying to run it for four people online is a chore because of the difference in volume between players.
@SagaxCorvinus3 жыл бұрын
@@ShamankingZuty I feel you. I know how that's like ― I'm one of the _less vocal_ players in my group. (when not GMing) In this case, I believe it boils down to _table etiquette._ When GMing, what I do in this case is stare silently to the players until they notice it and ask _all_ of them if I have their _permission_ to continue. When playing, I kinda do the same thing, but in that case I already gently expressed to them how I feel offended by their unintentional disregard. We're all adults, they did understand me. It's a kind of situation where you'll have to step out of _"nice-guy-mode"_ a little bit (I also don't like it, but I have to) and explain to them how their behavior is negatively disruptive to the table. Regarding online gaming, it gets more difficult, indeed. If you use no video/webcams then there'll be a lack of visual cues for the players of when they should be quieting down a bit. In that case, I suggest talking about _game table etiquette._ If none of that works, your problem may be something else.
@ethanlammar55543 жыл бұрын
That butt tool allows you to suggest things- Guy 2020
@jacquelynwilson23023 жыл бұрын
I do not see any links to the videos about 121 / 5 step method in description :( Guess I'm going a huntin' Love these videos though! Been watching them so much to prepare for my first homebrew :3
@chillialexander3 жыл бұрын
Guy, what is your view on using game, film, book references within the game? Does it increase the fun and entertainment or does it detract from the immersion?
@SagaxCorvinus3 жыл бұрын
I'm not Guy but may I give you my opinion? ;) There's nothing wrong in using your favorite movies, books or other media as inspiration for adventures, arcs and everything else. But when it comes to joking and making fun, use it sparingly. I've played in an adventure designed entirely upon anime references. Whilst it was a rather fun game, I felt absolutely displaced. Since I was the only one on the table that didn't care even as half as much about anime as everybody else, I spent most of the time trying to make sense of what was going on.
@chillialexander3 жыл бұрын
@@SagaxCorvinus Thank you. That makes a lot of sense.
@jamesnoble77773 жыл бұрын
Executive summary: Some of this seemed to be things to do after and during a game but I think it can all be couched as preparation: Remind yourself what happened last session, read your notes on the overall place in the plot and make a rough plan based on that information. Make sure you have loads of names ready for improvisation and be prepared to run with it. If players have given you notes about their plans make sure to negotiate it to fit into your campaign world/plan/plot /structure. Consider something for every *charachter* - if your rough plan is likely to leave one of the characters unengaged - maybe add something extra. Consider something for every *player* - the rough plan may include only things that do not interest one of the players... maybe add something. Check you're hitting these targets by asking players what worked for them after the game and take notes. Check your notes make sense (e.g. if there is ambiguity from some improvised interaction) by asking players or planning something to help you understand the importance of something (your understanding of what happened might be different than the players, particularly if your notes are vague). I've been GMing for decades and the only fault I've found with your content is that you sometimes ramble (often to entertaining effect). Most game books give you pointers on GMing but the devil is often in the detail and for all my experience I have learned much from your presentations so thank you Guy.
@alkirk62 жыл бұрын
I do a variation of the name list myself, however I do 80 names, 40 male names, and 40 female names
@gameram63823 жыл бұрын
Love this guy
@AndyJohnson3leftturns3 жыл бұрын
“Where am I supposed to get 40-80 names...” This is why I love Xanathar’s Guide. But I always feel it breaks verisimilitude if my players see me open it for a name. Since I’m making it up on the spot.
@Asmorod-Feld3 жыл бұрын
Hi Guy ! Where are the Five step template on the website ? I'm kind of lost, imposible to find it ! Thanks for all, my next campaign will be awersome i hope ;)
@cheru_fishmonster3 жыл бұрын
I laughed way more at Peeman than I reasonably should have.
@ArchiduquesaMA3 жыл бұрын
Xanathar's book has a list of names
@stephaniegrehan9084 Жыл бұрын
Nice alphabet work heehehee I like these suggestions, I'm going to make up an NPC list for future use
@Silverbeardedsurfer2 жыл бұрын
40 to 80 names? Are you trying to recreate the Malazan series?
@SilverOs666663 жыл бұрын
great video
@G.A.N.3 жыл бұрын
i need to learn how to properly make notes, all of them are so chaotic i hate them later.
@RanieroRamas3 жыл бұрын
These are superb tips! Quick question: Have you ever pondered the idea of creating a course about GMing?
@psycopuppy30473 жыл бұрын
He has a whole website devoted to this
@nonyabizness9563 жыл бұрын
Wonderful as always
@Geeves282 жыл бұрын
Recently found your channel and love your content, Guy. HOWEVER... I strongly disagree with your "saying NO or NO, BUT" section. This makes no sense to me. Why would I ever be so protective of the world/campaign/whatever that I've built that I would shoot down a PC name or an action that the player thought would be cool or that would bring them joy? You say that it's key to negotiate because you're not the All-Powerful Overlord of the game. However, right before that, you say it's okay to tell a player "no, you can't call your player that name because it doesn't fit this world or party thematically" or "no, you can't do what you just described because it doesn't fit the literal physics of dwarves or elephants." I don't really see any reason to be that heavy-handed in your litigation of the players' decisions unless you see yourself as such a superior DM. Moreover, there's no reason whatsoever to say no. You can achieve the EXACT SAME end result by saying "yes, but" as you can from saying "no, but". In your dwarf example, you tell the player "NO, you can't do that because dwarves and elephants don't work like that, BUT you could do this, AND you also need to roll a couple of checks to even see if that modified idea would work." That's a great way for your player to hear "oh, my idea wasn't very good, I'll not try that again." If you instead say "YES, you could do that, BUT can you describe how that would work?" Now the exact same editorial process ensues, but you've acknowledged the player's effort to be creative, and put the onus on THEM to initiate the conversation about "how would that actually work, and if you can't describe it then maybe you should tweak your idea to something that is more describable." You achieve the same goal of taking their outlandishly ridiculous idea and turning it into something that's at least plausibly ridiculous, while also acknowledging their creativity rather than saying their idea isn't good, and having them lead the discussion instead of you, which should lead to them having that discussion with themselves in the future.
@gstaff12343 жыл бұрын
Of course a 4-5 hour session is short for Guy as a 20 min vid is a quick video 🤪 Still Love it
@AudaciousAce19893 жыл бұрын
If my players want to do something ridiculous they should know that its ridiculous so I just let them try it even though it wont work. “Can I do (insert improbable/impossible action here)?” “I dont know, cAn YoU?”
@malyssaryan19873 жыл бұрын
Xhionwain the elf. :P
@ddmagee573 жыл бұрын
General Motors?
@notorious.scoundrel3 жыл бұрын
Is Guy Shad's first evolution? 🤔
@CrankyPants10203 жыл бұрын
Why dungeon fog over dungeon painter studio?
@HowtobeaGreatGM3 жыл бұрын
I find that Dungeon Fog allows me far more latitude in terms of creating beautiful maps rather than functional maps. I can make a stunning map in DFG in under 20 minutes.
@MackDnD3 жыл бұрын
This is the list of names I've used since the beginning. Cross one off when you use a name. :) brandondraga.tumblr.com/post/66804468075/chris-perkins-npc-name-list
@roberttschaefer3 жыл бұрын
You promised a short video. Opps.
@Darkfiretiger3 жыл бұрын
Handses? Knife? String or nothing?
@calebpipping3 жыл бұрын
“It will be short” *me checking the time... 21 minutes “well it’s not an hour long video so... sure short”
@matt57262 жыл бұрын
Comment space thing!
@Fishcrab3 жыл бұрын
Jahwn Wayne, ya know Jahwn Wayne?
@VengerSatanis2 жыл бұрын
Cha'alt!
@Noah-wx7fm3 жыл бұрын
Peeman😂
@meb71675 Жыл бұрын
“Brian8XQvivio” is a tantalizing NPC name for Elon Musk
@kimburdangerdeese79213 жыл бұрын
I thought I was the only one who used the alphabet
@rowanash53783 жыл бұрын
"Short video." *looks at timer, 21 minutes* I don't know about that one, chief.
@GulperEEL3 жыл бұрын
"That 'but' tool..."
@johnbryce82674 ай бұрын
Zhon Nguainne.. hmm.. could be elf'ie... btw... Zhon is an actual name I gave to my son. Hard Z,.. pronounced the same as John. now as far as the accent?? meh.. ya.. maybe not... kinda like the ... um... individual I almost had in a group that wanted to be... Cher. Avatar pic and all... ya.. din't work out for our group...