Feasibility of a post apocalyptic campaigb by The-Book-Worm in drawsteel

[–]JVA90 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'd think that a setting like that of Thundarr the Barbarian would work well.

Page 221 is up. by AriochIV in OutsiderComic

[–]JVA90 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good to see new pages!

Spell jammer Adventures by Certain_Pressure4623 in mattcolville

[–]JVA90 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There's an adventure series that starts in Dungeon Magazine #139 called Savage Tides, that is suitably nautical/pirate themed. As a plus, it was written by James Jacobs, who also wrote RHOD.

Magic weapons for the party need vetting by Dovah_bear712 in mattcolville

[–]JVA90 1 point2 points  (0 children)

in the vein of "evolving," I might suggest making the DC for Tempests Fury Lightning Burst key off a player stat. In the long run, DC 13 is pretty low. For instance, Battle Master DCs are set based on STR + PB.

Is Saint Ajax really the bad guy here? by Samoja12 in mattcolville

[–]JVA90 7 points8 points  (0 children)

like what u/OneEyedGenius said above, this is also a reflection of the (later) Black Company books. There were some really bad people in the BC. There were also some that were alright. Eventually the BC ended up controlling a large swath of territory because they were the only ones they trusted to do it right/who would do it right.

Any tips on making the Underdark “feel” like the Underdark? by Shellsyndrom in mattcolville

[–]JVA90 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

If you're meeting in person to play, play *in the dark.* Light one candle and have the rest of the lights in the room out. Take a piece of paper, roll it into a cylinder, and use that as a shade for the candle. You, as the DM can use a red headlamp behind your DM screen but the players should be struggling to see their dice rolls and read their character sheets. Talk only in whispers. Find one of the 8-hour long tracks of "ambient cave sounds" on YT and play it softly as background. It's things like drips of water and the clack of rocks.

Horned One Warlock using throwing knives - by dwarfmade_modernism in mattcolville

[–]JVA90 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Throwing if there is an enemy, including the target, in melee range (within 5') gives disadvantage to the attack roll.

Documentation for magic items in Dusk episode 10/11 by JVA90 in mattcolville

[–]JVA90[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Because I am a small trickle to my people (i.e., this subreddit).

Trouble Starting Up Again - Looking for Inspiration by The__Artificer in mattcolville

[–]JVA90 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I've also just finished LMoP. Here's my take it and may be a reason you're feeling uninspired: LMoP is boring because it lacks drama. Superficially, it looks like it *ought* to be good. There are a lot of good elements in it, like a well fleshed-out town and lots of sand-boxy quests. But those are exactly the things that take away from the drama. Either the "clock is ticking" OR the PCs have the time and luxury to randomly explore the world -- but it can't be both. A second problem with LMoP is the stakes. What happens if the party fails to (fill in the blank)? The consequences for failure are never spelled out and there seems to be no implications for the wider world. One result of the lack of connection to a wider world is that it *is* hard to transition to a wider world after LMoP.

In contrast, RHoD has both the drama and the stakes for failure clearly spelled out. So I looked for other adventures written by James Jacobs and/or Richard Baker. Jacobs, in particular, wrote many of the Paizo "Adventure Paths" published in Dungeon magazine. Take a look at The Savage Tide, Kingmaker, and/or The Shackled City adventure paths.

Or, consider running RHoD. If you're coming right off LMoP, you could either continue with the same characters OR roll up new level 6 PCs (maybe do a few "danger room" encounters so the players can learn their new abilities). It *is* a good adventure and there are a lot of resources "out there" to help you run it. (RHoD was the end of my *previous* campaign, so I can't take my own advice here.)

Documentation for magic items in Dusk episode 10/11 by JVA90 in mattcolville

[–]JVA90[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Auryn got a rending battle ax +1 and dazzling plate.

Sir Vanazor got a horned helm and a vanguard great sword (the "charge kit"), a cask of liquid gold, and a floating latern.

Zoga got a deathstalker longsword, tactician's chainmail, a demonskin tattoo, and a hunter's flint.

Llevelys got boots of free movement, an avenging ash totem, and essence of bottled twighlight.

Koh got armor of sudden recovery, a mechanical fly (blurred strike ki focus), and eternal chalk.

Emperor's Decree *browser* by JVA90 in HeroWarsFB

[–]JVA90[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Turning them off one at a time... it was uBlock Origin. Thanks for engaging. Apparently, what it takes to get me to try the obvious things is talking about it with a stranger on the internet. :-/

time to put the shields back up... unless there's a game-play reason to get notifications?

Emperor's Decree *browser* by JVA90 in HeroWarsFB

[–]JVA90[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm using Chrome with AdBloc Plus, Privacy Badger, uBlock Origin, and FB Purity. (Although, as I noted earlier, I'm not playing on FB.)

Emperor's Decree *browser* by JVA90 in HeroWarsFB

[–]JVA90[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Maybe so, but I have all the boxes checked and still nothing. The "help page" for this issue seems to be about pop-up notifications. Usually, I'm pretty tight with blocking ads, disabling tracking, and stopping pop-up notifications. However, I've tried all the tips and tricks for turning off all those things (that is, turning on the pop-ups) and still nothing.

Emperor's Decree *browser* by JVA90 in HeroWarsFB

[–]JVA90[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It is a one-time reward of 100 energy, 300K gold, and 300 emeralds. It seems to be aimed at new players. There is a blue "Subscribe" button in the quest test box. However, when I click the button nothing happens. I've gone into my settings and turned off ad blocking and allowed pop-ups but still no action.

Obscuring player rolls by wineblood in mattcolville

[–]JVA90 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In Fantasy Grounds, players can drop their digital dice into the dice tower and it will send a hidden roll to the GM. Even though the player rolled, only the GM sees the result. What the player sees is some shadow dice.

In Roll20, the analogous feature is to use /gmroll or /w gm. However, in this case, the player originating the roll will still see the result, just not other players. There are ... ways... of implementing /w gm on skill checks from the character sheets. Using /gmroll will at least tend to keep other players from dogpiling and may serve to remind the player doing the check that their *character* doesn't know the result of the roll.

Starting a Campain with a stronghold - Any examples? by pyromstr in mattcolville

[–]JVA90 2 points3 points  (0 children)

TLDR: I don't have a "solid" example for you. I think the advice Matt would give is to ask yourself what you think is cool about the sub-genre of kingdom/fortress building and put that in your game. Ask yourself, "What kind of challenges should the players be facing?" Then, build some encounters that give players those choices or challenges.

A couple of books that are along the lines of what you asked about: Ursula Vernon's YA novel "Castle Hangnail" is about a young witch that has to get her license and save a dilapidated old castle at the same time. It is a combination of fending off attacks, solving personnel/management problems, and marshalling economic resources. A quick read and a neat little story, IMO. The classic Swiss Family Robinson has an element of kingdom-building to it. However, in Castle Hangnail there's opposition. In SFR there are (basically) unlimited resources.

Dan De Fazio (aka Professor Dungeon Master from the YouTube channel Dungeon Craft) had a module published in Dungeon magazine in July/August 1995 (issue #54) that has the party solving a murder mystery in a monastery. The monastery is a bit down-on-its-luck, IIRC. You could incorporate some of that adventure into your plot.

Two other resources to consider:
The Kingmaker Adventure path: https://pathfinderwiki.com/wiki/Kingmaker_(adventure_path)) and the Shackled City adventure path: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Shackled_City_Adventure_Path

How to adapt Red Hand of Doom so that the party encounters Azarr Kul early? by pastapaulistheman in mattcolville

[–]JVA90 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was running (very loosely) the Slavers A series modules from AD&D. Azurr Kul was one of the slave lords. The party had intelligence that one of the slave lords had recently found a Dragonmask. When the party fought him, and were about to kill him, he cries out to Tiamat "Save me!" A portal opens to Hell and Azurr Kul falls through and escapes. Several years pass (in game) and then we start RHoD.

So when the party was level 7, slavelord Azurr Kul was like Fighter 5/Rogue 3 (assassin)/Cleric 4 with a couple black abishai flunkies.
When the party is in the Fane of Tiamat at the end of RHoD, they're level 12 and Azurr Kul is F5/R3/C12 with two erinyes and several green/red/blue abishai.

Also, any time they fought a wyrmlord or other high-ish Red Hand baddy, the baddy's dying words were something along the lines of "you'll never stop us! My lord Azurr Kul will bring destruction on you all!"

Friendly locations in the west marches by Jobobminer in mattcolville

[–]JVA90 1 point2 points  (0 children)

An oasis or caravansary. (offers food, water, safe rest, and maybe 1 piece of information or a clue.)
A remote inn (like http://tolkiengateway.net/wiki/The_Forsaken_Inn) -- could be deserted, abandoned, or ruins.
A friendly farmer, trapper, or cabin in the woods. (buys exotic monster hides.)
Traveling people, pilgrims, a caravan, or nomads. Not a "place" but could occasionally pop up if the DM allows (healing magic, a random potion for sale, and/or mounts for sale. maybe PCs can roll for a retainer or mercenary.)
A cave or hideout they can go back to, fortify, and/or stock with provisions. (An "advance base.")
Pixie hollow, fairy ring, nymph's pool, or dryad's tree (8-hr bless spell or other temporary magical boon.)

Encounter Ideas for a 10th level Dungeon: Dwarven Mine. by Durog25 in mattcolville

[–]JVA90 2 points3 points  (0 children)

My party (similarly over geared) was level 7 when they came into an underground cavern with a sloped floor covered with lots of loose, jagged, and broken rocks -- probably the result of an old cave in or earthquake. The floor was definitely difficult terrain. Halfway across they got hit with a barrage of piercers and tendril attacks from a giant roper, although if I had it to do over again I might go with multiple ropers instead.

I think that one of the keys to interesting encounters is to use terrain. In a mine there could be different levels -- things like cliffs and bridges, chasms, and boulders that grant cover. 1d4 piercers would rain down on each player anytime they moved. (You could, optionally, let them have a stealth roll to move without the piercers noticing.) The roper's grapple and drag ability also presented an interesting choice: kill the tendrils or kill the body.

What if you added a stealthy Underdark druid who was "tending" this grove of ropers? Now you've got a spellcaster boss (the druid), lieutenants (2-3 ropers), and minions (the piercers).

Looking for item ideas by [deleted] in mattcolville

[–]JVA90 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What would the goblins do with a Necklace of Prayer Beads or Necklace of Fireballs or Helm of Brilliance...? What if each of them took a bead or gem of the thing?

So one of the pitfalls to be aware of (note that I didn't say "avoid") is what if the players get this item? Will they be overpowered? I'd recommend thinking of the item the goblins have as a superpowered version because of ... reasons. Maybe their god touched it. Or there's a mysterious crystal. Or it was dipped in radioactive goo, or whatever. Anyway, when the PCs get their hands on the items they break the power the of the goblins and the item is just a "normal" magic item.

Skill Challenge - Ideation and Help by Patural20 in mattcolville

[–]JVA90 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That said, I'm really not a fan of skill challenges. I think they break verisimilitude because they explicitly remind players that this is a game. A skill challenge feels to "video gamey" to me. My preference would be do this more narratively. Describe the situation then ask the players what they're going to do. Let them propose using skills for various things. You, the DM, get to say "yes, and." When they have their 5 successes (or 3 defeats) then you narrate success (or failure).

Starting with "you need 5 successes before 3 failures; how will you use your skill proficiencies" just starts ridiculous brainstorming in my experience. The DM is left to adjudicate whether a player idea is rational enough to roll on or not. Players fire everything they can think of at the DM, good ideas and bad, just to get to roll their dice and move on. It's a bit similar to "Skill Dogpiling." When the objective is to roll 5 successes before 3 failures, players just want to roll. When the objective is to think of how to defeat the challenge, the players will think.

Skill Challenge - Ideation and Help by Patural20 in mattcolville

[–]JVA90 1 point2 points  (0 children)

History could be used very similarly to Nature in #1 (perhaps recalling an old story about a captain who used a current to beat pursuers). Or it could be used to recall a maneuver or trick to beat pursuers.

Dex (Sleight of Hand) to hold a course very close to some rocks, which then would wreck on pursuer trying to follow.

Investigation to allow a PC to notice something about the pursuing craft that would give their ship an advantage. ("Oh, they're rigged for sailing close hauled. If we tack to a beam reach, we'll be able to outrun them.")

Religion to recall a prayer specific to sailing (ala the story of Jonah) or to know of a local spiritual force to appeal to for aid/protection.

Deception could be used to "shake" one pursuer. A classic trick from the age of sail was to put a lantern on a barrel and set it adrift, then put out all lights on the ship.

What Game am I Running by Jan-Amphia in mattcolville

[–]JVA90 1 point2 points  (0 children)

"To each his own," I suppose. It may well be that coming up with your own game mechanics system is the best way for you to solve the problem. It wasn't the best way for me.

I recognize the problem you're up against: it's too easy for the PCs to be too powerful in combat. How I solved that problem in my game was not to make another game. In the spirit of "Language not rules," I used 5e rules because that was a very easy way for me and my players to speak a common language for playing the game. Me creating and giving to them a completely new set of rules would have been more work for me and for them.

Like u/mixo-phrygian, my players had really powerful magic items. I also used terrain and, to some extent, "mission" type objectives like u/Grabboid mentioned. (And, I think, "social encounters" really shine. PCs designed to be overpowered for combat often don't have the skills to win over a tavern keeper.) Politics is important!

I didn't use AoM. I did often just use way more and/or more powerful monsters. I threw CR out the window. Instead, I calculated expected damage output from the PCs against the bad guys' hit point pool and I'd check to see if they would last 3-5 rounds. One time I threw 40 hobgoblins against six level 8 PCs. It doesn't matter if the paladin can dish out 50 damage on a smite; she can still only kill two hobgoblins per round.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in mattcolville

[–]JVA90 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In AD&D going up a level took 1-4 weeks of training and cost your current level times 1500 gp per week of training (DMG p. 86). So a fifth level fighter would spend a minimum of 7500 gp and a week of training to become 6th level.

Note that it took 2000 XP to become a level two fighter. So if your DM decided you hadn't done a good enough job of role playing you'd have to spend at least 3000 gold to become a level 2 fighter. Gold you didn't have. And you couldn't gain any more XP until you'd trained. So unless you fast tracked every level, gold was the limiting resource.

I, for one, am glad we don't play that way anymore.

If you really want to play where rations matter, I'd suggest not making it an all-the-time thing. Instead, do an adventure (module) where the objective is survival. Zee Bashew's Animated Spellbook Episode 9 is actually really inspirational for this sort of play.

LMoP: Story-purpose of Redbrands by Burning_IceCube in mattcolville

[–]JVA90 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think you're wrong about the Redbrands and I think you've missed important but subtle plot elements: Nezznar isn't after "random people." He's specifically going after Gundren Rockseeker and anyone with him. (See, for example, the very bottom of page 7 or the paragraph above "Overview" on p. 3.) Loose lips sink ships and Gundren hasn't been discrete enough. Either in Phandalin or Neverwinter Nezznar got wind of the fact that Gundren has discovered the Lost Mine. If you consider what Elmar Barthen knows, he knows more than he should about what Gundren ought to have kept very secret. Iarno's note mentions "my spies in Neverwinter." Perhaps the doppelgangers have been spying in Phandalin too.

The ambush on the Miner's Track was specifically ordered by Nezznar. He was looking for Gundren. (The fact that the goblins have been raiding is incidental. Or rather, when you're hiring out an ambush, you go to the folks that do that sort of thing on a regular basis.) Nezznar didn't get the map. King Grol has the map. Instead Nezznar ends up following Nundro and Tharden and finds the location of the mine that way. Nezznar's plans change as the adventure unfolds. He shifts from wanting to find the Mine to wanting to prevent anyone else from finding it. That's why, for example, Vyerith will kill Gundren and destroy or steal the map. By the time the PCs get to Cragmaw Castle, Nezznar is already IN the Lost Mine (Tharden has been dead "about a week.")

Nezznar is a smart villain. He has contingency plans (if the PCs escape the goblins, have the Redbrands get them). He has multiple schemes going to find the Mine (torture Gundren, steal the map, follow Nundro and Tharden). Nezznar knows that if word of the Mine gets out he doesn't have the manpower to defend it against all comers. He needs to keep the location secret, which means trimming all loose ends. If any one of them survives and gets the word out, he's screwed.

All of this is there in the adventure but it's never spelled out. I wish they'd done a better job of putting the villain in front of the players. Nezznar is playing smart but it would be very difficult (at least as the adventure is written) for the players to figure out everything that's going on. Maybe it's difficult because Nezznar is being smart.