I’ve started running Curse of Strahd and have been having a ton of fun making wacky homebrew things for my party and tweaking the module. Unbeknownst to the players so far, I have made them all a secret Dark Power trying to use them to usurp Strahd and Vampyr, and they’re just waiting to offer their dark gift.

For example, I have a druid with some fire giant ancestry who loves Produce Flame and is their front line, so he’ll be offered a slightly weaker Rage with the Path of the Storm Herald desert feature to use once per long rest. The celestial warlock would get charges to boost his Eldritch Blast damage and some secondary healing in exchange for sapping his life.

Giving my players powerful upgrades alongside typical class advancement can make some encounters harder to balance around, but as long as we’re all having fun who cares about balance??

  • the_accidental_mind@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I enjoy helping others experience the first time wonder of discovery, even after years of playing. It’s why I play in a custom setting and regularly create new monsters, spells, subclasses, and magic items. So many people crave that moment of first contact, and I love to help them find it.

    On the DM side of that, when there are new things for the players to find, I get to stretch the creative muscles that I thought I had lost for years. I get to challenge myself to create new, interesting, and balanced experience to offer up for my table.

  • Percy@lemmy.one
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    1 year ago

    I’m a new DM and all of my players are new. I’m working on my own campaign and world my favorite part so far is the excitement of my players. When I told them I got the books it’s the only thing they talked about for two weeks

  • f4hy@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    My favorite part of DMing is to hide some inside joke into a dungeon or campaign. So everything seems like generic fantasy world but upon completing some quest it results in exposing some silly that is some dumb joke my friends.made years ago. That reveal is the best. I think in general it’s that I get to juxtaposition silly things and serious moments throughout.

    • jossbo@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Yeah in my opinion DnD should be a perfect mix of epic stuff happening and silly stuff happening!

    • jossbo@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Yeah in my opinion DnD should be a perfect mix of epic stuff happening and silly stuff happening!

  • TheThemFatale@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I love creating the bones of a world or a situation, then seeing how the party interpret, contribute, and react to it, then reacting to their decisions for the next session.

    Also sometimes, making traps and BBEG plans for them then being able to pull it off (and watching like a proud parent as they successfully get out of the situation)

    • Upvotes_Kills_Birds@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Yes exactly. For me, the most rewarding part is including the breadcrumbs to the real story while allowing them to explore the world we’re building together.

      • Redsven@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I’ve just been throwing breadcrumbs in front of my party for years now and taking them where ever they go. Its been so much more fun than just ‘telling my story’ for me. I would always have the start of a story I wanted to tell, but could never sort out the middle and the end, so I just let the players do it now and enjoy the show.

  • Kale@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    As a player I love any time we actually get to play, quite a lot of time spent away from the table unfortunately.

  • haltzief@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    When I first started DMing, I focused a lot on maintaining a captivating pace at the table, and also had a few story beats that I wanted to hit, and kind of nudge the players towards. This meant I was able to pull off some gratifying one-shots, or short arcs, which I thoroughly enjoyed, but longer adventures started to become too stressful to properly maintain. Especially if there is a larger connecting world or lore in place beforehand, that felt more constricting as the campaign went on.
    Practically it felt like being a filmmaker and making every session sensational. And when it worked, it felt awesome. If a session did not land properly however, I felt quite discouraged afterwards.

    Then I discovered: hey, I want to be surprised as much myself by the events as the players at my table. I don’t want them to follow my pre-existing story beats. Rather, I want to be an impartial arbiter and just see how the players react, and especially interact.
    Want to kill a key NPC? Sure, you can try, and if you manage to do it, the world will react accordingly.

    Three things I employed to make every session much more enjoyable for myself:

    • Adventure Design. I build adventures and campaigns “bottom up” (instead of top-down, where you do a lot of worldbuilding before play starts). Basically it means I have smaller sandboxes, with a few hooks, that might not even be backed up by anything yet, and just see what the players engage with and what sticks. Check out this Matthew Colville on Youtube, that explains it way better than I could.
    • Powerful Tools. I like giving the players meaningful powers and abilities, that are powerful, but also have some drawbacks. Not talking about the default “+1" magical items, but more like “you are invisible while you play this flute loud enough” or “With this ring you can breath under water, but you dry up if you don’t submerse yourself in water once a day.” And as soon as they earn such abilities, I just let them use it. Bypass substantial parts of the adventure? Well OK, you earned it - even if it’s hard in the moment to accept as a DM, I err on the side of just allowing it, because it feels awesome as a player to just be allowed using ones tools successfully.
    • Random Tables. I was very reluctant to use it at the table, because I did not wanted to drag the pace down and maybe “misinterpret” or tank the pace of a session. Sometimes I even rolled on random tables before a session, to “prepare properly”. But as soon as I committed to trying using random tables during a session, I noticed, that these sometimes quite improvised elements, caused the most fun on the table overall. And I just like being surprised by these twists and turns they might offer, how I can interpret them, and especially how the players react. And more often than not, they cannot even tell afterwards, what sprung from a random table, and what was planned beforehand.

    tl;dr being surprised by the twists and turns in the narrative I did not expect myself

  • RubberColby@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I enjoy watching my players hands shoot up in excitement when something incredible happens. Happened during my last session. Gave me all the fuzzies.

  • dethb0y@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I do almost entirely solo, but my favorite part is the unexpected.

    If you play a computer game, you know what’s going to happen or what’s within the boundaries of the simulation it’s running. Tabletop isn’t like that. It can spiral into anything and end up anywhere. That’s very refreshing and mentally engaging.

    • Greg@mander.xyzOP
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      1 year ago

      That freedom is exactly what I like about ttrpgs too. How do you do it solo?

      • dethb0y@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Oh it’s a whole method. I use oracles, i roll on tables, i automatically generate NPC’s.

        The actual easy part is combat because “usually” there’s a best choice for the enemy to take in any situation that makes sense for them.

  • FaceDeer@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    As a DM, my favourite part is the worldbuilding. I love figuring out how the setting works, what its history is and who the prominent people are. I do worldbuilding as a solitary activity sometimes, but having an audience makes it better and having a participatory audience is best. I ran a year-long campaign I called the “zero-prep campaign” where I didn’t do much or any preparation ahead of each session, letting the party’s decisions guide things and frantically filling in the universe around them as they went, and I managed to produce one of my most cohesive and fun settings yet.

    As a player, it’s similar but much smaller scale - I focus on building my character. I try to settle in to his or her skin, get to know them, figure out what they think about and how they’d react to various situations. The character is on a road I don’t know the ultimate destination for and I am keen to find out.

    • the_accidental_mind@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I also love the world building, but I think I approach it from a different direction. Rather than prepping sessions, I like to build mechanics and details into the world. These are often informed by the actions of my players, but in the game it allows me to run a similar “zero-prep” style because the world already exists. Especially after several campaigns in the same world, when so much has been generated over hours of play.

      The experience of seeing my world unfold before me, and seeing the wonder and emotion on my player’s faces, brings me so much genuine joy. I feel like I did when I was a kid.

  • all_or_nothing@vlemmy.net
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    1 year ago

    As a DM, I love when my players absolutely love or gravitate towards an NPC I made. So many times my players latch onto an NPC and it becomes their mascot. It also works really well as a tool for plot hooks or to give players engaging side quests to chase.

    • macgregor@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Players: “oh man, Stink Eye was the best, I’m still waiting for the reveal that he is the real big bad”

      Me furiously trying to recall some ad-libbed NPC from years ago: “oh yeah, Stink Eye, he’s a great…pirate? Man?..”

      • Pronell@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        “Oh yeah, Stink Eye! What do you all remember about them? What do you think they’ve been up to?”

        Get them to jog your memory.