Secrets of D&D Dungeon Mastering with Chris Perkins

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Dungeons & Dragons

Dungeons & Dragons

8 ай бұрын

Chris Perkins (Principal Game Design Architect, Dungeons & Dragons), Dungeon Master extraordinaire is here to answer, “How do you do THAT?!” and give you advice on how to level up your DM game! All are welcome, from the DM-curious to experts!

Пікірлер: 318
@pig.sensei
@pig.sensei 8 ай бұрын
"Saying 'no, you can't' is just as valid as saying 'yes, you can'" "Dumping a player is always an option. You can have friends who're not fun to play D&D with." Simple but powerful advice from the DM himself.
@chapwolff
@chapwolff 7 ай бұрын
That dumping a player thing, is great advice. I have always said that D&D is for everyone, however everyone isn't right for every table.
@bayushiteishiru6291
@bayushiteishiru6291 6 ай бұрын
03:04 This is such a deja vu, I refuse to believe it's a new video.
@ericdonarski1624
@ericdonarski1624 8 ай бұрын
Longform content with Chris Perkins is the best present I could ever ask for. Thank you for this!
@austinm8905
@austinm8905 7 ай бұрын
💯 agreed! His interview with Brian W Foster on Between the Sheets was so good before it got taken down 😢
@ericpeirce5598
@ericpeirce5598 8 ай бұрын
My favorite idea for a Gelatinous Cube that I haven't used is to have a few Mimics inside. A group of Mimics, each disguised as a different object, using the cube to travel to other areas of the dungeon. Since they are immune to acid, they won't be harmed and if the players "notice" that the items seem unharmed, they may even assume they are magical objects.
@frozi7711
@frozi7711 8 ай бұрын
Your EVIIIIILLLLL EVVVVIIIIIIIILLLLLLLLLL
@mikecrompton8518
@mikecrompton8518 8 ай бұрын
Daaaaaammmnn. That’s a fantastic idea. I need to use that.
@frozi7711
@frozi7711 8 ай бұрын
@@mikecrompton8518 your evil to xD
@doctoronishispsychosislab1474
@doctoronishispsychosislab1474 7 ай бұрын
you win 26:40 ish epic idea
@jamesduncan4105
@jamesduncan4105 7 ай бұрын
Oh I'm stealing this
@wouldcanoe
@wouldcanoe 8 ай бұрын
Chris is one of the three people that ultimately inspired me to get into DMing, because when he was running DCA he would occasionally pick up the rule book itself and look for clarification. Proving everybody makes mistakes or forgets some rules.
@SockimusPrime
@SockimusPrime 8 ай бұрын
One of the things I learned from Chris was that it's okay to just read out the rules to the players verbatim when you use a spell or monster ability. It creates a sort of clarity for the players: "I am putting these rules in front of you to ensure that you know I'm running this encounter in a way that is fair and according to the rules."
@haroldwilliams4311
@haroldwilliams4311 8 ай бұрын
My favorite moment was when he was running a live show for Aqc Inc when Tomb of Annihilation came out, and he said, "Let me check my notes..." and then picked up the book. Like, what a nerd flex!
@geekpuppet
@geekpuppet 8 ай бұрын
My favourite Dungeon Master to watch.
@TheCoulsonlax
@TheCoulsonlax 8 ай бұрын
Wish there were more Chris Perkins videos
@dragoninthewest1
@dragoninthewest1 8 ай бұрын
​@TheCoulsonlax My favorite is still his extremely short appearance as Spurts the kobold in the Mighty Nein campaign. He came in, threw a caged nest of wasps at a fire giant and was crushed like a over ripe watermelon. We barely knew him.
@snieves4
@snieves4 8 ай бұрын
I like BDS better.
@obsidiansiriusblackheart
@obsidiansiriusblackheart 8 ай бұрын
My top 2 are Chris and Brennan for sure. Brennan number 1 honestly
@raisenets99
@raisenets99 8 ай бұрын
Hell yes! I need him back at pax or have his own show
@GO_EZ
@GO_EZ 8 ай бұрын
*50* minutes of Chris Perkins? Christmas came early!! I can honestly listen to him talk about anything D&D without end, so thanks a lot for doing this video
@SockimusPrime
@SockimusPrime 8 ай бұрын
A lot of what I learned about pacing in Roleplaying Games I learned from watching Chris run Dice, Camera, Action, especially since those were 2 hour sessions, so they had to be tight. The players would usually start off with some freedom to make their own plans, then somewhere in the 30-60 minute mark, something would happen and inject chaos, whether it was an ambush, or a new NPC showing up, or some other unexpected element that changed the course of the game and injected a little chaos. I call that the "Tilt", and I actively plan for it in my games. I don't know when it will happen, but I'll use it if the game is dragging or I just need to switch things up. I also noticed that if the players spent too long discussing plans or waffling on a decision, Chris would interject with something like, "Paultin, you see....." or "Evelyn, make a perception check...." It's such a simple trick, but it immediately snaps the players' attention back to "in character", as they realize that things are still happening around them while they've been plotting.
@VesiustheBoneCruncher
@VesiustheBoneCruncher 8 ай бұрын
That first season of DCA taught me so much. Little things like murderbot, big things like helping a player who is struggling. No one I knew played, I at least knew the rules, so I was the defacto DM. The people I dragged to the game love it now - and Chris is completely responsible for that, none of it would have happened without his contribution to that series.
@RobertManzano
@RobertManzano 8 ай бұрын
Getting better at DMing by watching other DMs seems like such a rich way to continue DnD as a tradition, passing lessons down from one DM to another.
@CaseyWilkesmusic
@CaseyWilkesmusic 8 ай бұрын
This is easily the most helpful advice given directly by WotC. It’s about dang time
@xombiemike
@xombiemike 8 ай бұрын
Man I miss Chris. I miss the DCA days and Ravenloft nights.
@lorddreemurr
@lorddreemurr 8 ай бұрын
It has been confirmed that the waffle crew still plays at home with Chris. We might never see another episode again, but their story goes on.
@henrykomansky9352
@henrykomansky9352 8 ай бұрын
If tru - very happy for them!!! @@lorddreemurr
@BryanCGough
@BryanCGough 8 ай бұрын
Crediting the artists at the end of the live stream was extremely classy. Thank you for doing this!
@HeyThisIsBrian
@HeyThisIsBrian 8 ай бұрын
God I’ve missed Chris. The robot chicken game where he added dm commentary was one of the first pieces of D&D content that got me hooked. I hope he does another dice camera action type series soon.
@azzaelulbrinter
@azzaelulbrinter 8 ай бұрын
I normally can't stand watching other people play D&D, but Chris Perkins is the only exception. Loved his Descent into Avernus One-Shot, teached me how to be malevolent in a cool way.
@echeaz
@echeaz 8 ай бұрын
He made me laugh hysterically when Deborah went to look in her pocket for her squirrel but it was gone and her jaw dropped! Hilarious!!
@mammonclarke
@mammonclarke 8 ай бұрын
I would love the chance to play a campaign at Chris Perkins' table. Of all the "celebrity" DMs out there, he is by far my favorite.
@RocksMisInternets
@RocksMisInternets 8 ай бұрын
Chris Perkins is who got me excited and into D&D! Looking forward to this! One of the greats for sure!
@dylanramsey5817
@dylanramsey5817 8 ай бұрын
I wish Chris's old DM's Experience articles from 4e were more easily accessible, because so many of the tips in this video are right there, complete with examples in play from his own campaigns--how he preps sessions, what to do when a player hogs the spotlight, making characters (especially villains) cool and memorable, etc. They're awesome stuff!
@CooperAATE
@CooperAATE 8 ай бұрын
My table voted on the timer, and it's helped A LOT to keep combat moving. Different strokes, and all that.
@CooperAATE
@CooperAATE 8 ай бұрын
As for the TPK, I say ALL of them are great answers. Personally, I lean toward A
@Aavarius
@Aavarius 8 ай бұрын
Long form, practical discussion with Chris and Jeremy is the best content. Hands down.
@EliorFureraj15
@EliorFureraj15 8 ай бұрын
So exciting! I first encountered D&D from the Acquisitions Incorporated live shows with Chris Perkins the DM. Now, I've been DM-ing for a few years with my group of friends. So excited to hear advice from my favorite DM!
@mikezacek7495
@mikezacek7495 8 ай бұрын
Re: how long to prep - especially for new DMs, prep only as much as you are okay prepping if the game bombs after 1 session. Your new players probably aren’t as initially enthusiastic as you are about this new venture. I have read a lot of horror story testimonies about an excited new DM that spent 200 hours on worldbuilding, for a table that was distracted by phones and didn’t continue after session 1. If you would be resentful toward players for not engaging with certain content, don’t prep it yet. If you love worldbuilding for its own sake and it’s relaxing / a great creative outlet, then by all means go for it.
@miked3340
@miked3340 7 ай бұрын
Pre-game checklist has been helpful. Used it for 2 sessions so far, thanks.
@matthewmarting3623
@matthewmarting3623 8 ай бұрын
To Chris - thank you for the gift of D&D you gave to so many people by helping start the actual play movement with Acq Inc. That’s how I got into it. To those of you wishing you have more Chris to watch- He has a multiple year long campaign he ran on KZbin called Dice Camera Action.
@kalipassion04
@kalipassion04 8 ай бұрын
D&D this is brilliant this is where Perkins shines above all. I love this. Definitely sending this to ppl who are interested in ttrpg.
@joaozanutto29
@joaozanutto29 8 ай бұрын
I am going to be a DM for the first time... can't wait to learn some tips from the master Perkins ❤❤❤
@ketto3268
@ketto3268 8 ай бұрын
I wish you the best of luck!
@progressiveDND
@progressiveDND 8 ай бұрын
Do it! Behind the screen is it's own game, and it's a blast!
@StarRightStarTight
@StarRightStarTight 8 ай бұрын
This was a really cool clinic. I’d love to see more videos for DM’s
@robertemery1307
@robertemery1307 8 ай бұрын
I started playing back about the same time as Chris. We had the 3 original booklets as far as "rules". His point about the rules are to help guide playing is spot on. We had to fill in the blanks ourselves. Mr. " rule guy" , hadnt been invented yet.
@CharlesKhan
@CharlesKhan 8 ай бұрын
happy to see more longform content and not just clips
@andrewfrancis7181
@andrewfrancis7181 8 ай бұрын
Gotta say, as much as i dont care for what WotC is doing to the IP, Perkis and Crawford are jems that need to be preserved.
@lecram86
@lecram86 8 ай бұрын
How do you do that? Well, you start by DMing when you are 10 and never stop. Jokes aside I really appreciate that someone I admire as much as Chris Perkins shares their wisdom. If this helps me to be a tiny little fraction closer to being a DM like him is a huge help already.
@lorddreemurr
@lorddreemurr 8 ай бұрын
Chris is why I've become a DM for the last 3 years. I'll never forget DCA and how it inspired me to tell my own stories. Your the best Chris! We love you man!
@greenandgarb
@greenandgarb 7 ай бұрын
Chris Perkins dropping dungeon master wisdom like a gelatinous cube drops unsuspecting adventurers!
@user-jj6zx6jn9o
@user-jj6zx6jn9o 8 ай бұрын
A video with master Perkins is always a must watch. Missing the Lore you should know segments! Long live Perkins! :)
@papapaulrocks
@papapaulrocks 8 ай бұрын
This was surprisingly fun and helpful. Thank you Todd and Chris and the D&D Team.
@MrATucker88
@MrATucker88 2 ай бұрын
I love Chris Perkins. He is the best DM out there. He is an example of a person who turned their passion into success.
@kathrynmcclatchy
@kathrynmcclatchy 8 ай бұрын
Great reminders. Thanks so much for talking it out!
@darjr
@darjr 8 ай бұрын
This sounds super fun! Please more of these!
@davidalbin1171
@davidalbin1171 8 ай бұрын
The Grand Master and sculptor of many great scenarios. Loved the AI stuff, very scared by Tome of Annihilation (!)
@EnjeoLineMedia
@EnjeoLineMedia 8 ай бұрын
The last gelatinous cube in my campaign was a corporate faction murdered a rival settlement and used a gelatinous cube to clean up all the evidence of their crime - which my players witnessed
@Draeckon
@Draeckon 6 ай бұрын
Love this video. My one critique: please when doing long-form interviews like this, include a chapter breakdown of the video with timestamps. I'm sure I'm not the only person who comes back to videos like these later looking for a specific part of it. Not needing to scrub through it would be nice for referencing.
@Josh-99
@Josh-99 8 ай бұрын
The best Gelatinous Cube I have ever DM'ed was the intelligent one in Out of the Abyss. The party adopted it and it traveled with them for a significant portion of the campaign.
@budakiarcher
@budakiarcher 8 ай бұрын
Can vouch for watching other DMs. I've learned so much watching Chris Perkins and Jeremy Crawford. Watching the guy who wrote the rules allow his players to circumvent them (Galdur's Tower in Acq Inc anybody?) is a liberating experience lol
@ForestGreen-gd9fc
@ForestGreen-gd9fc 8 ай бұрын
I liked this interview. I hope Todd gets the job in the design team 😉.
@Belly6815
@Belly6815 8 ай бұрын
Definitely a great move getting Chris back on to talk hobby. It's really key to keep key ambassadors in the public eye to stop the faceless corporate element overshadowing the hobby space
@michaelmarten431
@michaelmarten431 8 ай бұрын
Chris is the DM I’ve learned the most from over the years. His games are so much more an accurate representation of being a Dungeon Master. You’re not usually going to have actors or Improv comedians at your table like other shows. No disrespect to other streams. Those shows are fun to watch, but Chris keeps it real and is more relatable. Awesome guy and awesome DM.
@ibecker2820
@ibecker2820 8 ай бұрын
The content that you guys have been putting out lately has been great, interactive and informative
@casgt
@casgt 8 ай бұрын
1st time going to SDCC in 15-20 years and got to see Chris do this live. It was a highlight of the con. Happy others can watch this great presentation.
@jimmyrepine8952
@jimmyrepine8952 20 күн бұрын
This video should be stickied in every DM/GM resource area.
@adamvolk7905
@adamvolk7905 8 ай бұрын
Read Sly Flourish’s “Return of the Lazy Dungeon Master.” It’s the only book DMs need (besides the DMG).
@ReadingDave
@ReadingDave 8 ай бұрын
My gelatinaus cube challenge transforms the cube into terrain. This cube has had allot of food and has eaten the dungeon. There are gulps of air and fluids which give the adventures safe spaces to explore. Various things can calm, enrange, vacate, make playful the cube so there might be passages that open up with the impending doom that at any moment the cube might reclaim the room they are in and make navigating the maze more complicated.
@thatguy846
@thatguy846 8 ай бұрын
Thank you Chris, this was the best video I've seen on this channel in months! Thank you so much :)
@BradDaeda
@BradDaeda 7 ай бұрын
DM of 40+ years here. All good stuff. Side note, for my "loading wheel" I will stare at the computer screen or "at papers" behind my DM screen like I'm reading, but I'm really just thinking. lol
@AkeishaLeighanneRoberts
@AkeishaLeighanneRoberts 8 ай бұрын
This was over the top fantastic and I absolutely adore it! 🥰🥰🥰 I have missed getting to see Chris run games and provide advice like this! --- Hope to see more videos like this going forward! 🥰🥰🥰
@zanthusprime4355
@zanthusprime4355 2 ай бұрын
I just found this video. I have to chime in on DM’s being the actor for all the NPC’s. Finding their motivations is a wonderful method on how to play them. As well as giving them a vice and virtue. I’ve found this so helpful that in my campaigns I have eliminated alignments. I will ask my players to think up a character design including a vice, virtue and motivation along with their backstory. That is enough to govern your player. I always encourage my players to have their PC’s grow and evolve and I love seeing scoundrel ranger whom is a loner and cautious of people become so fused with the group they can’t fathom being without them. The pendulum swings with characters and it creates incredible story moments. NOW there are characters that are inherently evil suck as a vampire or mind flayer but that is derived from their motivations and cosmic corruption that only truly evil NPC s can possess from influences from Gods, Demons and inter-dimensional beings. I’ve found by doing this understanding what makes the vampire lord or the illithid or even the orc commander is far more influential and connects with players more readily than simply “I’m lawful good and you’re chaotic evil we must fight!” When a player sees or feels the motivation it almost humanizes the villain creating a moral struggle. Most times I find drama is what people want to see in games and it’s so easy to create it using this method.
@silva29
@silva29 8 ай бұрын
Thank you Chris it was your audio only episode with Penny Arcade that got me into DND. I followed their progress all throughout and eventually started to DM myself. You are a gem and longform content with you is always a pleasure to watch.
@GazpachoTabletop
@GazpachoTabletop 8 ай бұрын
Nice one. Chris Perkins is great. Love listening to him talk
@ADirtyLeviathan
@ADirtyLeviathan 8 ай бұрын
Absolutely Loved this Great informational video!
@cecilia_mackie
@cecilia_mackie 8 ай бұрын
That is so great! Pls stay in touch!
@MrExeetor
@MrExeetor 8 ай бұрын
our Barbarian Fighter 2h Axe first attack against our first boss became a crit (3.5e) which then became a full oneshot on the demon-possesed minotaur we fought. This "one shot" is still one of the all time great memories we have left from from that campaign ^^
@ButchWilson
@ButchWilson 8 ай бұрын
This was outstanding. Of course, it was. It should be bookmarked and become regular viewing. Thank you, Chris! Thank you @DNDWizards!
@Neon-Flux
@Neon-Flux 8 ай бұрын
Acquisitions Inc with Chris being dm always one I look forward to and enjoy - Green flame! , my fav dm to be inspired by, great video choice
@genghisgalahad8465
@genghisgalahad8465 8 ай бұрын
I'm back in the mindset mindscape headspace hearth immersion of D&D with this wonderful fireside chat with the excellent esteemed Chris Perkins!
@aponly
@aponly 7 ай бұрын
Great info. I learned something new and felt validated. I'm been DMing for over 40 years and absolutely love 5th edition.
@elisec5999
@elisec5999 8 ай бұрын
This is an excellent video! Thank you!
@xalgusod5091
@xalgusod5091 8 ай бұрын
We really need more stuff like this
@Gilathorn
@Gilathorn 8 ай бұрын
Thank you for the video Chris
@jashyotes
@jashyotes 8 ай бұрын
Love Chris. More Chris! I was so disappointed when he stopped DM-ing the penny arcade campaign. I'll take any Chris Perkins I can get!
@TheGratefulDad
@TheGratefulDad 8 ай бұрын
THIS IS WHAT A NEEDED!! I've been struggling to understand what i should be doing / preparing as a DM and finally someone just lays it out! i took so many notes while watching this and feel so confident now to DM for my friends!
@hunterdnd
@hunterdnd 8 ай бұрын
I would like to point out that altough 12:14 is funny, Descent into Avernus literally tells you that if the players don't do what Captain Zodge asks them to do, then kill them, while stating "maybe the next group of adventurers will be better at this". ;)
@Handle1023
@Handle1023 8 ай бұрын
As a DM, something I do when I need time to think is to have the players randomly roll a perception check, history check, or insight check, and then ramble for a minute about nothing until I eventually have enough creative resources to circle back to what was actually relevant. So far I haven’t been called out for stalling, so I think it’s good advice.
@kingjames3192
@kingjames3192 8 ай бұрын
Honestly if you are making your players roll checks to discover nothing of importance, because you need to delay them while you think of the next steps for the campaign, that sounds like a bad habit that wastes everybody's time. In scenarios where you don't know what the next step is for the campaign I would highly recommend being honest about this and saying you need to take 5 to get the next steps straightened out, rather than stalling your players. I think most players will appreciate "Wow guys, you found some creative solutions I didn't anticipate and took this in a direction I didn't expect. I'm going to need to take some time here to get the next steps of this campaign straightened out." more than hearing things like this a couple times in a row "the cliff is jagged and is littered with loose rocks twisting and grinding upon themselves. Erosion from rain has made dark spots within the cliff face, as mold grows and dies. You don't see or hear anyone here, just a lot of rocks and earth." Not trying to roast you. I've had the same habit in the past, but realized players appreciate an honest GM more than one who tries to put up a false act of having everything figured out at the expense of everyone's time.
@Handle1023
@Handle1023 8 ай бұрын
@@kingjames3192 You’re welcome to dismiss my advice if you don’t think it would be appropriate at your table. I’m a DM at two tables: one bimonthly campaign that has been ongoing for two years, and one weekly that has run for four months or so. By my estimations, I have about 200 hours of DMing experience, more if you count one shots I’ve done. Believe me when I say I truly love this game. The improv does get easier the more you practice, so I find myself rarely relying on this tool these days, but this tool can be used constructively. I’ll give you an example in the form of a story that’s probably far too long for a KZbin comment: I was DMing for a pickup game of DND for some friends of mine who had never played before and wanted to try it out. While they made some free characters on DNDBeyond, I had about 10-20 minutes of prep time, interrupted by them asking me questions about character creation. Therefore, I decided to rely heavily on tropes: they would be raiding a trapped ancient temple in the middle of a desert a la Egyptian tombs in movies. My players asked me difficult questions: Why was the temple built? Why did they decide to travel to the middle of the desert for it? What was so precious that the temple protected? I improvised the answers to all of these questions and the layout of the whole temple, drawing maps in real time on sheets of graph paper that I happened to have for one of my classes. A genie had convinced the now lost inhabitants of the region that he was a god and demanded a temple be built to his worship. A mage academy hired the party to recover an important magical artifact at the heart of the temple. The artifact was a stone said to contain the power of the sun. What was initially supposed to be a quick pickup game ended up being a compelling setting for my players. As I mentioned, I was creating and drawing the maps in real time. I drew the first room of the temple: a large room with an altar in the middle, a frayed rug leading up to the altar, and some carvings on the wall. In my head, I had already put the trigger of the first trap on a tile hidden under the rug leading up to the altar. I wanted to draw attention there by mentioning the rug specifically. I initially planned on having the carvings just be indecipherable hieroglyphics, but I had a player ask to examine the walls for secret doors. She failed her investigation check (I may have put a secret compartment had they passed). Then another player asked to inspect the altar and moved the quarter we were using for her character directly over where I had drawn the rug. Realizing I had not determined what kind of trap it would be, I paused and drew attention back to the player who had asked to inspect the walls. I used my tool. I had her roll a perception check. I then described the scenes they saw depicted on the walls: the Genie fighting a dragon, saving the ancient people from a giant worm, blessing a harvest, and I also foreshadowed an idea I had had for later in the dungeon: I described how carved in the wall were people surrounding a man in a sarcophagus, all of whom were themselves surrounded with deliberately carved points. On a successful religion check, a player learned that the scene was depicting a curse for those who interfered with the dungeon (they would later learn that the points were representing flies). I think your objection to my tool comes from your philosophy that a roll should only be made if there’s a point to it, something to succeed at- that a perception check should only be made if there’s something to be spotted, that a history check should only be made if there’s lore to be unearthed. Unnecessary rolls waste time, and if there’s nothing that would be left to chance, just narrate the result. This philosophy is probably a healthy one, but you can apply different philosophies at different times depending on what the situation calls for. My first counter to that is that players love to roll dice. They make dopamine-inducing clicking sounds. My second counter to this is that you can still immerse the players in the setting while being a bit ramble-y. My third counter to this is you can use this tool and give players value for their rolls. If they already suspect something , confirm it. If you’re running a pre-written module, you know a trove of information that your players probably don’t. Eke out some of that information. In the example I gave, the players learned how the genie convinced the builders of this temple that he was a god. I also foreshadowed a curse that I had laid ahead of them in the dungeon. If you’re wondering how I eventually resolved the trap, the tile triggered a giant spiked ball attached to a wooden beam which swung toward the player who stepped on it like a pendulum, before crashing into the altar, destroying it (the player succeed a Dex save and took no damage). The destruction of the altar released their first combat encounter, dust mephits, but also revealed stairs leading deeper down in the temple. We used candy to represent the mephits. And my players weren’t aware that I was stalling for time until I told them after the session had ended. If the players are all having fun, you’re doing DND right.
@richardrose3304
@richardrose3304 7 ай бұрын
Really great stuff here, thank you!
@user-ql8fb1gm9t
@user-ql8fb1gm9t 8 ай бұрын
WOW. Those are some really good tips! I will sure be applying them to my table
@JoeStoryteller
@JoeStoryteller 8 ай бұрын
Thank you for this video, as a 20+ years DM, I learned a few tips I'll be using.
@GlennM53
@GlennM53 4 ай бұрын
I bought the starter set way back in 2014 with no clue what I'd picked up. Sat confused and unable to comprehend how to play. I watched aq Inc. when Chris was DM. Learned what on earth d&d was and I still DM for a group to this day. So sorry Chris. But watching Chris perkins is good advice. At least 1 new DM was born because of it 👍
@jay_cadiramen
@jay_cadiramen 8 ай бұрын
This is great - thank you!
@MyFireVideos
@MyFireVideos 7 ай бұрын
As a new DM, this video was very empowering. Thank you!
@anathema1828
@anathema1828 8 ай бұрын
Nice work on the video!
@idfungus
@idfungus Ай бұрын
Thank you for this video. It sparked an idea for a big bad for me that has evolved into an epic session.
@RladalFatih
@RladalFatih 8 ай бұрын
I would add what I think is the most important tip for becoming a better DM: do it more and experiment. Watching other GMs is a good source of inspiration but it won't be much help if you don't get the practice in. Run more games with more people, with other systems, play with other genres, fiddle with new mechanics. And sometimes that even means watching other GMs less because you're too busy preping your next session.
@ElocNodnarb
@ElocNodnarb 8 ай бұрын
I loved the gelatinous cube in Wild Beyond the Witchlight stuck in the Well and preventing water from flowing.
@hunterkarr5618
@hunterkarr5618 7 ай бұрын
As someone who has never played dnd but wants to DM, this video is very helpful. Thanks, Chris!
@JavierSanchez-mo2ef
@JavierSanchez-mo2ef 8 ай бұрын
Awesome stuff, thanks for the free content
@ReadingDave
@ReadingDave 8 ай бұрын
Along with the egg timer, I visibily count down with fingers when I want to increase tensions.
@Runeologic
@Runeologic 8 ай бұрын
I had a gelatinous cube who was friendly and used to clean the bones of the dead as s sign of respect in a necropolis.
@thepeterwan
@thepeterwan 8 ай бұрын
Good one. i enjoy this video.
@IncaSteppa420
@IncaSteppa420 8 ай бұрын
The new DMG should just contain one page with a link to this video.
@TheSlasherJunkie
@TheSlasherJunkie 7 ай бұрын
38:20 beloved pulp mystery writer Raymond Chandler was asked for advice on writer's block, and his response was "when you've written yourself into a corner, that's when two goons bust in guns blazing." Raiders, goblins, kobolds, fungal servants, mindflayer servant drow, the possibilities are endless.
@PrinnyBlack
@PrinnyBlack 8 ай бұрын
Gelatinous Cube Challenge: Several tiny cubes inside various tubes and pipes. The tubes and pipes are part of a bagpipe-like instrument. The cubes are telepathically connected to the musician playing the instrument and can move at high speeds to produce different notes. They also eliminate stray spittle. One or several pipes can be emergency evacuated, effectively firing the cubes as projectiles, after which the cubes may merge to form a larger cube.
@joshhouser1754
@joshhouser1754 7 ай бұрын
DCA literally changed the entire trajectory of my life. Thank you Chris you're incredible.
@acc201b
@acc201b 7 ай бұрын
Bill the Gelatinous Cube is one of my players favorite shop keeps he runs a pawn shop essentially
@sleepinggiant4062
@sleepinggiant4062 8 ай бұрын
Yes, thank you! The DM is absolutely a storyteller. They create all the content and tell the players what happens when they try to do stuff. Character death should be touched on in session zero. I would not ask my players for suggestions on a ruling. I feel that this is the DM's job to handle and could cause issues in other situations. Sharing the spotlight is the DM's responsibility. Take the focus off the spotlight hog, make them wait until it's their turn. Don't dump the player until after you have talked to them and given them a chance to correct their disruptive behavior. The dungeon roomba! A slope where the cube slides down and hits the whole party. Korg has a high squeeky voice and he's a rock. Sometimes subverting expectations works. Dodging plot hooks makes for a bad player. Make an adventurer, not someone that needs motivation to go adventuring. Even a paladin can use treasure to donate to further their cause. Always have something else prepared, namely a couple 'random' encounters. If nothing else, improv some roleplaying. Do not play fast music to try and motivate your players into action. Look directly at a player and ask "What do you do?" Slow player - warn them that they will be forced to take the dodge action if they can't decide in a reasonable amount of time. Players enjoy a challenge much more than feeling powerful. When the boss is way too easy, it's not fun. There should be risk vs. reward, not an easy win. Get better at designing encounters! How do you become a better DM? Practice! as both a player and DM. Do not try to emulate other DM's style. You are not a professional voice actor, so watching one won't make you a better DM unless you are trying to learn to do funny voices. Learn the rules, be familiar with your players character's abilities. Read the forums, watch youtube videos on DM advice and horror stories. Listen to your player's feedback and be open to critisism. Thanks Todd and Chris! This was fun.
@ANDERU4YOU
@ANDERU4YOU 7 ай бұрын
I made a cube encounter where a dwarf mountain stronghold used it in essentially a giant septic system. The sewer/septic tank area was large, with multiple grate walls meant to filter debris from the water and the cube would dissolve everything it could like a biofilter. The multiple grate walls inhibited my players' movement though the sewer, but the cube could pass through them easily T-1000 style, though I would cut its speed in half as it passed through.
@hightowerhomestead9046
@hightowerhomestead9046 8 ай бұрын
Fantastic video.
@abortedlord
@abortedlord 8 ай бұрын
I usually have some heavy metal going in the background, not loud to be a distraction, but it does seem to set a bit of a pace, and without it there's a noticeable difference in the whole mood.
@dillpickle987
@dillpickle987 8 ай бұрын
I wonder how much of this wisdom will be in the upcoming iteration of the Dungeon Master's Guide. Here's hoping it's a lot!
@RichardHopkinsLobosSolos
@RichardHopkinsLobosSolos 8 ай бұрын
For the "let them die" option. In the first of the Monster Hunter Memoirs books (MHM: Grunge) by Larry Correia and John Ringo, the narrator character is a United States Marine in Beirut in the eighties. He goes to sleep in his bunk in the barracks and wakes up on the shores of a lake talking to an old guy named Pete who is fishing. He's told that he can go on ahead, or he can go back. If he goes back, there's a mission. He chooses to go back and is given a sign. The sign is 57.
@tntori5079
@tntori5079 8 ай бұрын
Cube that is controlled by sentient object it absorbed and now Uber powerful entity wants freedom. This was actually super neat and I've always admired Chris's DMing. As an experienced DM I feel very validated! Also I love how his prep style is so similar to the Lazy DMG by Sly Flourish. Absolutely changed ,y DMing for the better. All these tips are soooooo goooood!!!
@rob2e
@rob2e 8 ай бұрын
Nothing but the best (advice) from the master!
@SeanLaMontagne
@SeanLaMontagne 27 күн бұрын
Wow that was amazing
@l0re811
@l0re811 6 ай бұрын
In reference to the quetion, "What if PCs don't want to engage with my prepared content", I will often ask them: "Well, what would you rather do?" Then I will just stall for bit, maybe with a random encounter or two, just to get through the current session, that way I have time between sessions to prep something they said they would enjoy.
@MrTrevormaclean
@MrTrevormaclean 8 ай бұрын
I do, in fact, feel validated
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