InEnduringGrowStrong

joined 1 year ago

english or deutsch doesnt work

[–] InEnduringGrowStrong@ttrpg.network 1 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (1 children)

test from another instance usibg undefined as language

[–] InEnduringGrowStrong@ttrpg.network 0 points 11 months ago (3 children)

Also, I'm not a medical professional, but I was just wearing scrubs just now... post-processing a 3d resin print after working too much all week.

Which konsi are you?

 

Credits to @ahdok@ttrpg.network for guessing my likeness after a few days of sleep deprivation.

How about you? which Konsi are you at the moment?

I'm assuming everyone knows Konsi and Ahdok, but if not there's plenty of their work here and on their profile.

Let's do this.
❤️‍ 😴

I'm assuming we're talking long term injuries and not just mid session HP.
I'm also assuming you want something more efficient for maybe a shorter downtime, but not something they carry with them all the time.

Invent a "bacta tank" thing, something that makes sense for your world, and give them access to that?

Maybe it's a magical pool of healing in a long lost cave that's powered by a beam of moonlight.
Maybe it's powered by some offering or sacrifice to a divine (or darker?) being.
Maybe it's a particularly proficient doctor who uses new methods.
Whatever, since you created it, you can fine tune the healing vs resource cost exactly how you'd like.
Maybe a an hour/day/week in it refreshes x/y/z, it might be static amount or dice based. It might require some material or not.

Whatever it is, I'd make it location based just to be sure they don't haul that thing across all your future dungeons for infinite healing shenanigans.
Having that thing is their stronghold (if they have one) would be nice for sure, and maybe it'd make sense for them to build a sort of homebase around that magical place, but moving it around should be either impossible or highly costly, long and complicated.
Otherwise it's gonna be a bunch of shenanigans and they're gonna have that thing hauled by servants through the dungeon so they can refresh between every encounter. Or they're gonna bottle it up for sale and become BigFantasticalPharma or some other random PC idea.

Whether it's a place or an NPC, they'll likely become very protective of that, probably wanna keep that a secret and it can become a plot hook in itself.
"Sure... the blacksmith's daughter has been kidnapped, but — wait they got McDoc McShizzleWounds? Letsss gooo^oooo!^"

"The misty fog is weird, sure and people have been disappearing... we could investigate that maybe, but — what? there's a very remote chance that the fog is impeding the healing pool? Ready the horses! /clop clop"

Whatever it is, you're in control of exactly how much it does, you just need a believable and fun excuse.

 

Title.
I'm a noob DM, I've played some 20 years ago, never DM'd.

So far, I've read the books, but more importantly, I've read and watched both Sly Flourish and Matt Colville so I think I got a handle on a few things.
I mean, not really, but I'm a bit more confident in knowing that I'll mess things up, but roll with it.
But... my first game would have a single PC who never played D&D, which isn't mentioned too often.

Any tips on running for a single noob PC?

My main concerns are:

  • a single 1st level PC can easily get wrecked by even a small number of goblins
  • playing a DM PC comes with important caveats
  • fudging dice can work but needs to be subtle enough, and not the only thing keeping the PC alive.

Action economy means even lowly encounters would have a very thin line between boring/challenging/tpk.
DMPC has its pitfalls, I'll need to avoid stealing their thunder and not become a leader/authoritative voice in the party.

As such, I was thinking on running more of a cowardly follower type rather than some full-fledged customer-support-superhero DMPC. Not that it needs to be bland, but I feel it definitely needs to be following rather than leading. Helpful and engaging, sure, but that NPC's story shouldn't be the focus.
I'd probably roleplay it, but have the PC run both in combat.

I'm very confident they'd enjoy getting something like a pet from a Wondrous Figurine, but I feel like getting/rescuing that from a ~~BBEG~~ SBEG (SmallerBEG) in their first adventure is probably more fun and memorable for them than just getting that in their starting equipment on their character sheet.
But I guess having them make a cool background story of how they got that might work too.

Pros: The wondrous figurine is implicitly not a leader, helps on-demand when they ask for it, rather than when the DM thinks so. Unlike a pet, it never really dies, it just goes to the astral plane to kick their wounds and comes back purring. Having their beloved pet in an actual death situation is probably a red line for them, those will be discussed in session 0, but since I've been living with that player for 15 years, I already got a good picture.
Cons: probably a bit much magic at that level, but I'm not too worried about them being more powerful. Needs a realistic intro.

Not many cons tbh. If they have fun and I don't kill them outright I think that's pretty good. I feel it'd be easier to have them be a bit more powerful and find bigger challenges if needed... than it would be to scale everything 25%.

So far... my plan is to inspire myself from Phandelver, but keeping it loose and as sandbox as I can manage.

I was thinking on running a coward, possibly expendable NPC with them at first, at least until they complete the first goblin hideout.
I'd change that to somehow have some of the goblins there using the reluctant figurine pet to torture Sildar (not unlike Drizzt' Gwenhwyvar to be honest).
The figurine could have been a gift from the Spider to Klarg for capturing Gundren.
Even then, I don't wanna plan too much and would rather find an organic way for things to happen.
Getting the figurine earlier than Klarg could be helpful, but needs a bit of work story-wise. Maybe there's a goblin teasing it instead of the chained wolves in one of that first room, idk. It'd have to feel natural.

The more I think about it, the more I think Gwenhwyvar was explicitly invented by Salvatore for Drizzt's first low-lvl single-PC campaign.

Any input is appreciated.
This post is way longer than it should

Peace