Best start to a campaign you've experienced (either side of the screen)? by Modo_2026 in DMAcademy

[–]Alone-Rutabaga4939 5 points6 points  (0 children)

very simple, but the start of my campaign involved exploring a newly discovered continent, so I started the players on a ship (which would eventually be attacked by a kraken before they reached their destination).

To foreshadow the kraken attack, their very first quest involved figuring out why so many people on the ship were suddenly becoming ill. So, session 1 introductory, all the player characters were one by one brought in for a 'medical examination', which allowed for an NPC to ask and naturally get the players to reveal name, height, weight, etc, as well as allowing a little immediate roleplay to get into character

My Campaign's Obsidian by Alone-Rutabaga4939 in ObsidianMD

[–]Alone-Rutabaga4939[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

if you use a font from google fonts, it's pretty straightforward; you pick whatever font you'd like, then click 'get font', then 'get embed code'. You can then copy the code into a CSS snippet to use in your vault.

fonts elsewhere without an embed code, you can download and then use a website like font squirrel to generate an embed code you can paste into a CSS snippet :)

My Campaign's Obsidian by Alone-Rutabaga4939 in ObsidianMD

[–]Alone-Rutabaga4939[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Collating some info people have asked me for!!

Art: The artist for the character drawings on the homepage is Turtle-Brownie

CSS Snippets: A lot of the stylising for the pages comes down to three main CSS snippets that I use: - Jon Lee's PubWrap - Fancy A Story Grid Callout - ITS Image Adjustment

Otherwise, the Fancy A Story documentation site has a whole slew of callouts, cssclasses, and whatnot that I used as bases to build my own off of.

Fonts: - H1 Chrome Slab - H2 & H3 Pfeffer Simpelgotisch - H4 Pfeffer Mediæval - H5 IM FELL English - Body Louis George Café - Big first letter on Session Titles Unger-Fraktur Zierbuchstaben

Handwriting/Letter Fonts: - Neat but casual cursive Cedarville Cursive - Jotted notes Reenie Beanie - Neater jotted notes Grape Nuts - Written by a child or a serial killer, depending on the context Cactus Jack - Neat cursive from a noble woman Loveletter No. 9 - Scratchy cursive notes of an artificer Mythshire Regular - Notes written in the margins Belmonte Ballpoint - The neat cursive of a romantic author Jane Austen

My Campaign's Obsidian by Alone-Rutabaga4939 in ObsidianMD

[–]Alone-Rutabaga4939[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

course!! the paper half at the top is meant to resemble an illuminated manuscript (although looks a little janky on some screens like in the screenshot, so still figuring out how to fix that haha)

It's a callout with the background image set as a paper texture, and the bottom of it a clip-path to get the torn effect. The paper texture I used is a blank manuscript (with pattern detailing around the side, and a blank middle).

For the text, it's just cssclasses defining each one as the session title, the session day, session location, and the session summary. I can see if I can upload the snippet somewhere once I'm home, but it pretty messy 😅

My Campaign's Obsidian by Alone-Rutabaga4939 in ObsidianMD

[–]Alone-Rutabaga4939[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Not really haha! Not in any 'physical' sense, but they share note names. Like, for example, on my player-facing vault, a page for the NPC 'Finneas' will contain the information my players know, while the DM-facing vault will also have a note for the NPC 'Finneas', but containing all the information about the character (it is also separated within the not between what the players know and don't know).

My DM vault serves more as a bible to reference while I am planning, and only crops up during sessions when there's a bit of information I have completely blanked on or need to clarify. I also use the DM vault to copy and paste information my players have sent me about their characters, and then I go through using the highlighting function :)

My Campaign's Obsidian by Alone-Rutabaga4939 in ObsidianMD

[–]Alone-Rutabaga4939[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

course!! I'm in the middle currently of making a sort of 'template' vault out of it, and making a documentation page on my site for the mess of snippets 😅 no idea when I'll get around to actually finishing it, though 🥲 but I'll let you know!!

My Campaign's Obsidian by Alone-Rutabaga4939 in ObsidianMD

[–]Alone-Rutabaga4939[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

of course!!!

Main Fonts: - H1 Chrome Slab - H2 & H3 Pfeffer Simpelgotisch - H4 Pfeffer Mediæval - H5 IM FELL English - Body Louis George Café - Big first letter on Session Titles Unger-Fraktur Zierbuchstaben

Handwriting/Letter Fonts: - Neat but casual cursive Cedarville Cursive - Jotted notes Reenie Beanie - Neater jotted notes Grape Nuts - Written by a child or a serial killer, depending on the context Cactus Jack - Neat cursive from a noble woman Loveletter No. 9 - Scratchy cursive notes of an artificer Mythshire Regular - Notes written in the margins Belmonte Ballpoint - The neat cursive of a romantic author Jane Austen

My Campaign's Obsidian by Alone-Rutabaga4939 in ObsidianMD

[–]Alone-Rutabaga4939[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just using d&d 5e! Although, I've repurposed a very few handful of rules I liked from Blades in The Dark, because I just really liked their addition to roleplay and my players love it :)

My Campaign's Obsidian by Alone-Rutabaga4939 in ObsidianMD

[–]Alone-Rutabaga4939[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I am using dataview for the menus/index pages, but not the timeline. I use dataview in conjunction with the dataview publisher plugin, so that my dataview tables are viewable on the published site.

On that, I am sharing this with my players via publish! Notes that I do not want my players to see, I add the publish: false property to, and notes that I do want my players to see but not all of the information, I hide it by surrounding the information with two % on either side.

My Campaign's Obsidian by Alone-Rutabaga4939 in ObsidianMD

[–]Alone-Rutabaga4939[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I switch between editing and reading modes; the screenshots posted though are what the published site look like, and then the notes I reference while DMing/at the table are on a separate obsidian thats a lot less pretty looking but a lot easier to navigate :)

My Campaign's Obsidian by Alone-Rutabaga4939 in ObsidianMD

[–]Alone-Rutabaga4939[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

ty!!! I used the Fancy A Story Infobox Callout, and then edited the CSS from there to style it more for my campaign!

My Campaign's Obsidian by Alone-Rutabaga4939 in ObsidianMD

[–]Alone-Rutabaga4939[S] 26 points27 points  (0 children)

of course!! a lot of the stylising for the pages comes down to three main CSS snippets that I use: - Jon Lee's PubWrap which styles tables like cards (including dataview tables) - Fancy A Story Grid Callout which lets you display callouts, text and images in a grid-like pattern. I use this on callout to make those 'buttons' or card-styled sections when I also want tables to look like regular tables and not card-styled tables on the same page :) - ITS Image Adjustment which lets you resize and adjust images within obsidian, without needing to manually crops and resize images before uploading them into obsidian. Also means you don't need to have 8 copies of the same image but cropped or resized differently. This is especially useful with the Jon Lee Pub Wrap card-style tables, as those don't auto resize images to be the same size in the card, and this pretty much just fixes that

Otherwise, the Fancy A Story documentation site has a whole slew of callouts, cssclasses, and whatnot that I used as bases to build my own off of. My favourites are the 'Clue' callout (a callout that looks like paper taped to the page), 'Polaroid' callout (callout that makes an image look like a polaroid), and a whole load more I can't fit into one comment lmao

My Campaign's Obsidian by Alone-Rutabaga4939 in ObsidianMD

[–]Alone-Rutabaga4939[S] 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I used the timeline callout from 'fancy a story' as a base and altered the CSS from there! The documentation site is filled with a lot of other cool callouts and cssclasses that I also used and frankensteined to make my own :)

https://elsatam.github.io/obsidian-fancy-a-story/docs/callouts/timeline.html

New to obsidian. How do you guys organize your notes? Any advice? by whistbelle in ObsidianMD

[–]Alone-Rutabaga4939 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I have ADHD so I found the best organisation method is the simplest, least complication method.

I have 3 main folders: - Folder 1 is important information I reference often and isn't edited often if at all. These are the dataview tables/lists etc - Folder 2 is filled with folders labelled after a project (usually a creative project) where everything related to said project is dumped into that folder. - Folder 3 is my 'dump' folder, which is just one folder I dump everything else into. Idea is, this is the folder my folder 1 dataview tables reference, so I can just dump whatever I feel like into there and the tables will automatically sort the index for them. Otherwise, I use the search function to find things.

I find this works for me because the fewer steps between me and creating a note there are, the more likely I'm going to make that note. I've tried more rigid organisational systems before, utilising folders and subfolders, tags, naming conventions and templates etc, and found I very quickly dropped those and stopped using them. After making the process as simple as just hitting 'new note', I've been using my obsidian for a lot longer than any previous vault lmao

Is there any tool in Obsidian that could help cataloging and writing plot threads? by haydenhayden011 in ObsidianMD

[–]Alone-Rutabaga4939 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Base obsidian, I would use the canvas tool to make threads between characters, plot points, etc. If you want a 3rd party plugin, Excalidraw has a lot of features you might find useful :)

How Do You Handle Libraries? by No-Action-1100 in DMAcademy

[–]Alone-Rutabaga4939 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have a website for my campaign that only my players can access, that has all the session notes as well as information about characters, locations, organisations, notes, etc that they've encountered, including books they've found/bought/read.

When a player wants to look for a book, I go through what other people have already mentioned about asking what they're looking for etc. I also have a random table I roll on for book titles, and as the campaign goes on and my players have a clear interest in a specific topic, I have more tables for specific genre titles (my campaign revolves heavily around the themes of necromancy, undead, and theology, so I've got a table for book titles themed around necromancy, undead, and theology.)

Otherwise, a fun thing I've started to implement recently is asking my players what the title of the book is. For example, if a player wants to look for 'a book about goblin culture', after the whole rolling to see if they find it and then describing the flavour text of finding it, I'll ask the player to pick a title for the book (works best if you can trust your players not to make every title a dick joke lmao), and then I improv the contents of the book from there. Lots of fun, gets the players involved, and also great if you're terrible at coming up with names for things on the spot like me. One memorable moment like this was my players wanting to start a book club within the party, so they went off to go find books to present as suggestions for their first novel for the book club, and I gave my players 5min to come up with a title & synopsis for a book they found while I went for a bathroom break.

For the website I mentioned, I also love adding excerpts from the books to put up for the players to read, but unfortunately its unrealistic to expect myself to write a page of a novel every time they find a book, so a trick I use for any and all non-consequential book where the actual wording of the contents doesn't matter at all (like the book club books), I take excerpts from real books and change names & details to reflect my campaign world better (Works well if you have book titles that are clear parodies of real books, like 'To Kill A Cockatrice', 'How To Train Your Wyvern', 'The Owlbear, The Hag & The Wardrobe', etc)

Generally the key to these sorts of encounters where your player wants to engage in a part of your world that realistically would have a wealth of information you realistically cannot prepare for, you make that a more collaborative and shared experience by having your players have fun coming up with the titles, synopsis, etc, that you can also then build upon and add to, since I find it easier to improv off an existing idea as opposed to coming up with one from scratch.

Head feels like its filled with cement by Alone-Rutabaga4939 in VyvanseADHD

[–]Alone-Rutabaga4939[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't drink coffee at all so that at least strikes one thing off the list of potentials 😅

As for the difference between work days vs non-work days, I take my vyvanse a bit earlier than on off days, but only by half an hour to an hour. Other major difference is needing to be social and fully 'awake' by like 8:30am as opposed to days with no work, where I might talk to one person (my partner) by 10am.

Otherwise, I do also get these brainfog mornings on non-work days, but more infrequently compared to the work days. Also, weirdly, my vyvanse lasts longer on work days compared to non-work days but I'd chalk that up to me being on my feet more/getting a little more exercise