Why 90% of D&D Combat Is Boring

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  • čas přidán 2. 08. 2021
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    Many D&D and RPG players often find combat in the game boring. Today we discuss five ways you can make your Dungeons & Dragons and roleplaying game combats less boring and more fun and interesting for both you, the game master, and your players.
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Komentáře • 817

  • @theDMLair
    @theDMLair  Před 2 lety +22

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    • @minnion2871
      @minnion2871 Před 2 lety

      As for Giants.... Sometimes I think that the enviroment can be used to great effect when throwing giants at the player....
      Hill giant in an open field? Not all that exciting...
      Hill giant on a ship? That giants fat butt is gonna be rocking the boat, and tossing the players around...
      Hill giant in a town or city? Ever see a Godzilla movie? Yeah watch out for falling buildings....
      Then of course there is the rock throw attack.... Why does it always have to be a boulder? Maybe take the setting into account and sub in other things the giant could throw.... things present in the environment as hazards(like explosive barrels, or cannons, or horses or cattle, look out for that sheep! Keep him away from the pasture! Aw gross the coffins full of rot grubs!)

    • @mctv6829
      @mctv6829 Před 2 lety

      Well we know you're not a novelist, because you talk in circles for 11 mins.

    • @ezrafaulk3076
      @ezrafaulk3076 Před 11 měsíci

      I'm actually writing my *own* TTRPG system that uses a combat system I designed *specifically* to allow everyone to *meaningfully* participate in the combat, and make it more cinematic and engaging. I'm not gonna detail it here in case someone tries to *steal* and claim it as their *own* , but that's the idea behind it because combat is ironically the most *boring* part of a traditional TTRPG, and I think the traditional combat system *itself* is at least *partially* to blame.

    • @tonymaurice4157
      @tonymaurice4157 Před 9 měsíci

      That's why I can't stand critical role, Because every footstep is a committee discussion!

  • @schylerfontenot7358
    @schylerfontenot7358 Před 2 lety +329

    “I rolled a 4, for 1 damage” “yeah that actually kills a bunch of orcs” that one got me 😂

    • @andresmarrero8666
      @andresmarrero8666 Před 2 lety +17

      I presumed that they were the barely alive ones torched by the fireball.

    • @samanthasowell9307
      @samanthasowell9307 Před rokem +3

      Haha, yeah because the GM is also bored. Then he doesn't let the other guy die, because if the dm is gunna suffer so WILL YOU ALL!

    • @gagesmith-ingodwerock
      @gagesmith-ingodwerock Před rokem +1

      It's that moment when the DM is ready to end the combat 🤣

    • @chickensky1121
      @chickensky1121 Před 8 měsíci +1

      The orcs are so weak that they're just sharing a hit point, lol.

  • @Klijpo
    @Klijpo Před 2 lety +426

    Why the DM also be a story teller: the DM should know what will happen IF the players DO NOT INTERVENE. If they choose to avoid a plot hook, a few sessions down the line they should learn that the city has fallen to the orc horde, or the dragon has laid waste to a village they liked.
    You can't have emergent stories without consequences, and thus a DM should know beforehand what the consrquences are...

    • @cheesy_87
      @cheesy_87 Před 2 lety +66

      Thank you. I am tired of always hearing that the GM is not a story teller when he absolutely is for exactly that reason.

    • @crimfan
      @crimfan Před 2 lety +30

      I agree that the DM is a storyteller. However, the stories that the DM tells need to be much more open-ended than that of a novelist. I feel Luke was working a bit of a false dichotomy there. released content and is the model for many DMs
      I actually like the way that 1E did it: There were levels 1-3 modules, light hooks to later modules for levels 4-7, then hooks for 8-10, etc. The DM's job using that content was to string together an interesting story from them. This made the adventuring party feel more like a career of events rather than one big, world-spanning story. Even the classic I3-5 Desert of Desolation---one of Hickman's first modules---ran for levels 4-10, and had plenty of off-ramps along the way, where PCs could die, switch out, and so on.
      floating

    • @Ilzhain
      @Ilzhain Před 2 lety +26

      The way that Luke was presenting it was a bit frustrating, there very much is a middle ground between a pre-planned adventure and an emergent story and I very much feel that that middle ground is the ideal space to operate. Relying on the story being fully emergent does allow for more player agency but it also severely limits the scope of your games, having a planned narrative taking place in the world that the players interact with as opposed to follow directly, allows them to uncover what's happening and make choices that can influence the outcome of said narrative since their actions are not a part of the pre-planned narrative but rather outside interference. Having some idea of what will happen allows a DM to better incorporate the players actions as they occur.

    • @CosplayZine
      @CosplayZine Před 2 lety +4

      No, what happens in the game should be put it in place to advance the story, not to punish the players for not doing what the DM had planned. If its destroyed it should be part of the story either way.

    • @elgatochurro
      @elgatochurro Před 2 lety +2

      DMs not a story teller unless they ralroad

  • @dougiethompson2822
    @dougiethompson2822 Před 2 lety +106

    3:41 Number 1: The Stakes must be Real
    13:32 Number 2: The Power of Narration and Description
    19:51 Number 3: Allow All Players to Participate in the Combat
    23:07 Number 4: Pacing
    25:18 Number 5: Combat is More than Hit Points and Damage

  • @randybarker9571
    @randybarker9571 Před 2 lety +202

    I always have steaks in my encounters. A good BBQ is amazing to distract that raging barbarian. (lol)

    • @Cloud_Seeker
      @Cloud_Seeker Před 2 lety +4

      Well. That brings a whole new meaning to Hell's Kitchen.
      I can see it now. A bunch of angry demons dressed in aprons with a BBEG human shouting at them in the background.

    • @bryankia
      @bryankia Před 2 lety +1

      Steaks you say. I am gaming with you!

    • @agsilverradio2225
      @agsilverradio2225 Před 2 lety +3

      Plot twist: the BBQ was orginised by the BBEG!

    • @randybarker9571
      @randybarker9571 Před 2 lety

      @@agsilverradio2225 You and your party come across a clearing and you see smoke rising above the area you were told that you could find the BBEG... as you approach, you pick up the aroma of well smoked steak, chicken, and a another strange smell you've never smelled before.
      As you get closer you see different giants joking and laughing about with their fires and grills running. to the side you see what unmistakably is the Butcher carving up pigs, chickens, cows, and...the local villagers of a town nearby.... what do you do?

  • @alexanderrogers4557
    @alexanderrogers4557 Před 2 lety +151

    My Rule 1: If it's boring, add an explosion. Suprising how often this helps

    • @logantbirch
      @logantbirch Před 2 lety +6

      Genius! 😂🙌

    • @alexanderrogers4557
      @alexanderrogers4557 Před 2 lety +14

      @@logantbirch It really is suprisingly effective. Boring village tavern conversation? Not if orgres come charging throw the wall!. Combat going far too quickly? Trap goes off and the room collapses allowing them to escape

    • @eros5420
      @eros5420 Před 2 lety +16

      Transformers Movie franchise summed up.

    • @ballelort87
      @ballelort87 Před 2 lety +3

      Underground -> earthquake

    • @FenrirEX
      @FenrirEX Před 2 lety +1

      My players in a Ravenloft game felt this.
      Suffice to say, powers failures occurred.

  • @mrivu5925
    @mrivu5925 Před 2 lety +331

    I think you forgot one very important thing: Battle music. It makes all the difference. I even had my players choose any song as their character theme that plays during crits and such.

    • @igorigor5342
      @igorigor5342 Před 2 lety +8

      Is it? I never used this, because thought it doesn't matter

    • @warmmilk9480
      @warmmilk9480 Před 2 lety +27

      I've never found music to be that important... but I have noticed some players expect it or prefer it and others don't care that much. But the idea of crit music is pretty awesome. I'd love that as a player.

    • @EpicGalaxyDragon
      @EpicGalaxyDragon Před 2 lety +34

      The thing that I have found with battle music is to make it apprpriate to the scale of the combat. Don't play Dark Souls 3 boss music when the party encounters two goblins. And don't pick something with lyrics or that would otherwise be distracting. At the end of the day, the goal of music is to enhance the tone.

    • @elgatochurro
      @elgatochurro Před 2 lety +6

      Like bravely default?
      That's a good idea when someone does something amazing

    • @salamshalom
      @salamshalom Před 2 lety +8

      Yo.... crit music!

  • @Gevaudan1471
    @Gevaudan1471 Před 2 lety +172

    There's a lot of value in the Hickman Revolution. A series of combats without a story is just a battle simulator.
    The key is to realize that the story is being crafted by the DM *and* the players at the same time.
    If the story ends prematurely by a TPK - that's ok! It's a tragedy.

    • @euansmith3699
      @euansmith3699 Před 2 lety +15

      "Hey, look, fellow party members, we've all got an invitation to the Red Wedding. I love weddings!"

    • @spudsbuchlaw
      @spudsbuchlaw Před 2 lety +2

      I disagree that it's just a battle simulator. It's called emergent storytelling because the story emerges from what the party chooses to do or not do, which will naturally be a result of the Character, personality, and roleplay

    • @Gevaudan1471
      @Gevaudan1471 Před 2 lety +23

      @@spudsbuchlaw Relying solely on your players to generate plot is excruciatingly lazy.

    • @spudsbuchlaw
      @spudsbuchlaw Před 2 lety +5

      @@Gevaudan1471 I'm guessing you've never been in a emergent story game, have you? It's a super popular style, because it's really not what you seem to think it is.

    • @Gevaudan1471
      @Gevaudan1471 Před 2 lety +20

      @@spudsbuchlaw I've been in games where the DM did no preparation and expected the players to spin an adventure out of whole cloth. Most game sessions consisted of players staring at their character sheets for 4 hours looking for a plot point.
      What you're describing sounds just like that, and it was excruciating.

  • @viktore8
    @viktore8 Před 2 lety +110

    When asked a question or when stating something, Old Man Commoner should always refer back to older editions of the game sparking confusion and frustration. It would also highlight his "Back in my daaaays" attitude.

    • @GoGoRoboto
      @GoGoRoboto Před 2 lety +8

      Wizard has a d4 hit die right?

    • @Erbmon
      @Erbmon Před 2 lety +3

      You don't have a "back in my day" problem you have a boneless GM problem if that happens in your games.

  • @Sarados1980
    @Sarados1980 Před 2 lety +54

    I think you missed one important tips:
    1. NEVER do a "Party vs. one enemy", always add mooks/grunt to a fight. Groups tend to burn a single monster within a few rounds, simply because they have (combined)
    much more actions per round.

    • @thebeanqueen1669
      @thebeanqueen1669 Před 2 lety +8

      Just give the monster more turns 4head

    • @Sarados1980
      @Sarados1980 Před 2 lety +3

      @@thebeanqueen1669 This would be a solution for sure, But I would it also would change the general rules (one actor = 2 action) and mess with the players expectations of the situation. Also you will still have the issues, that the player will probably nuke the one monster in a few rounds (if you not increasing it's hp also, which would also setting the wrong expectations for the players).
      So instead of buffing the "one monster" I would simply give it some minions (also big mighty monsters/bosses should have minions or not?:D ).
      Also keep in mind that minions soak much more damage then their hp, because the players have to move around and damage beyond 0 hp simply vanishes. ;)
      And at the end, it's more fun for the players, when the fighter can slash through hordes of monsters or the wizard can finally us his fireball to blast half a dozen enemies. :)

    • @panszczur8087
      @panszczur8087 Před 2 lety +7

      ​@@Sarados1980 There are legendary actions in dnd5e, so it already breaks “general rule”, but - well - that's the damn point of THE Monster.
      There are even “lair” events which (usually) happen at static initiative of 20.
      You could easily make “The” Werewolf boss act twice, first time at their initiative and second at half their initiative, and it would still be sensible (Maybe I would limit him to one dash per round or something like that)

    • @Sarados1980
      @Sarados1980 Před 2 lety +2

      @@panszczur8087 Never tried this (playing mostly PF/SF).
      After thinking about it, I think if you differ between the monsters normal action and this "special actions" it could work (and I think I did it a few times with boss fights).
      Neitherless I would always add at least some grunts to the fight, so the mage can throw his fireball or the fighter could cleave/whirlwind and feels good about it.
      It also helps to prevent a static "tank & spank" scenario. ;)

    • @jayspeidell
      @jayspeidell Před rokem +1

      My last boss has legendary actions, crowd control, area denial, nearly the action economy of the party, deadly attacks, and downed a few party members before they scraped by with a kill. It lasted six rounds and was really tense. I got great feedback to "make more fights like this."
      There are many creative alternatives to adding grunts. Grunts just sap player actions and resources. More dynamic and powerful bosses can fully transform how combat happens and make that encounter feel more unique.

  • @saintsinna
    @saintsinna Před 2 lety +64

    I've always disagreed with the whole emergent story being better than directed story thing when it comes to TTRPGs. Having done it both ways, there's little better than the players realizing this obscure fact or event from the beginning has become extremely important in the end. I always find that the argument that you need player deaths for stakes in combat to be just a lack of imagination. I have run games where literally player death was not allowed (3 failed death saves means a character is unconscious and injured to a point where healing magic won't work on them, and a TPK results in either capture or the whole party being left knocked out), but I still managed to put stakes in every battle. Having the whole quest fail, the whole village/nation/world be destroyed, having terrible things happen to beloved NPCs, all leaves losing combat being painful and something you want to avoid without taking away the characters people worked hard on. I generally only have characters die when an enemy's specific motivation is killing, that way the death can at least be dynamic and feel like it makes sense as opposed to random and senseless, and the other stakes keep combat from being boring. People taking too long on their turns...that one I still have an issue with...

    • @soldyne
      @soldyne Před 2 lety +5

      I agree. I prefer a balance between emergent and directed. the DM needs to have stuff planned for the session which requires some amount of directed story telling ahead of time. the DM should also be willing to let the players determine if the directed story is worth perusing and go with the flow to all a new story to emerge, but, going all one way or the other isn't the answer.

    • @BleydTorvall
      @BleydTorvall Před 2 lety +7

      It really depends on your preferences as a player too. I'm a big fan of JRPGs, and those a pure directed stories. Purely emergent storylines also just don't do it for me, because without having something to direct my actions, I have trouble deciding on what to do.

    • @fuckyoutube000
      @fuckyoutube000 Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah, I've had snowflake players too. They cry when they lose? If you like your PC and village, work to keep them alive and well.
      some of the best player reaction I've had is when they realize the grim results of their past failures. When they can handle defeat.
      If player death at random points makes your story fall apart, well I find that to be just lack of imagination. (not directed at original poster)
      killing and death are results of motivation, that is what it means to be a hero/adventurer.
      Different strokes for different folks I suppose

    • @dragonflyradio127
      @dragonflyradio127 Před 2 lety +2

      @@fuckyoutube000 I agree with the point, if not the delivery. 5e character generation is not that dime consuming or difficult. You could argue that an optimized character is, but then why would you need that in a a game you literally can't lose? The whole reason I allow players in some games ro make min/max PCs is so I can put in all the deadly deadly homebrew without feeling guilt about it. If you just want a character, have the character. I think a big issue is early levels. Most of the options people want to have in a PC do t come online until around level 5, so they spend weeks or months or more playing a character and trying to get it to be the thing they want. I think more high level entry adventures and an understanding that you can make a new character at party level of yours dies would go a long way to ease players into accepting death in D&D.

    • @randomusernameCallin
      @randomusernameCallin Před 2 lety

      I make a clear different from the story and what happen in the game play.

  • @sarougeau
    @sarougeau Před 2 lety +91

    I've been doing historical fencing for a few years now and it's made me realize that some DMs aren't really that knowledgeable about martial arts which can lead to some bland combat descriptions. One pet peeve of mine is a DM who interprets every missed hit roll as a missed attack or a dodge. I can tell you from experience that in melee combat, you rarely whiff an attack against an opponent within 5 feet of you. I prefer to interpret missed rolls as blocked attacks, because it's much more advantageous to stop and control an opponents weapon than to dance around it. If you look up any HEMA sparring video, you'll see that opponents block 90% of incoming attacks with their own weapons and rarely ever try to dodge. I feel that this at least is more dignified to your characters and makes the Paladin who's trained with the blade since a youth look like a competent warrior instead of an oaf who can't even hit a training dummy.

    • @josiahdublin7816
      @josiahdublin7816 Před 2 lety +7

      Some? You mean most DMs?

    • @darkfishthedestroyer139
      @darkfishthedestroyer139 Před 2 lety +4

      agreed, perhaps some basic knowledge on historical combat/martial arts would make it better in my opinion, especially on critical hits,
      instead of saying: "he thrusts his blade so hard and with so much force into the opponents breastplate that it concaves inwards..."
      i would much prefer a description such as "you grab the blade of the sword with one of your hands while lunging forward and proceeds to jam the tip of your sword in a gap between the plates right under the armpit..."
      or saying: "you stab the man at arms in the head, blood pours everywhere..."
      and instead saying: "you push the man at arm's head onto the wall, denting the back of his helmet and you grab your dagger and you stab him directly in the eye through the eyeslit..."

    • @FlameUser64
      @FlameUser64 Před 2 lety +3

      My preferred tactic would be to flavour missed attacks as either dodges or _well-executed_ blocks and parries. Attacks that _hit_ are instead flavoured, unless they're a particularly telling blow such as dropping a character below half hit points or doing a lot of damage from a crit, as _poorly_ executed blocks. Things where you're forced to take the attack a little too directly against your sword, and your arm rings from the impact. Or you get an incredibly near miss and have to bend awkwardly to avoid a vertical strike to the head, expending a disproportionate amount of stamina and throwing off your posture.
      That said, I have little experience with weapon-based martial arts. All I know is karate (including some training with the bo staff and kama, although that's not relevant here), and everything else is based on anime and fantasy and what I personally feel flows well and looks cool. Which _may_ in fact be piercing straight through a breastplate with a powerful thrust of a rapier or a whirling, backhanded strike with a starknife, but I still tend to prefer emphasizing grace, precision, and style over brutality.
      For me, the big thing is this: for missed attacks it is almost always best to assume the miss is a result of an action on the defender's part rather than a failure on the attacker's part.

    • @Lellie77
      @Lellie77 Před 2 lety

      100%!

    • @JorgeGonzalez-kp9fp
      @JorgeGonzalez-kp9fp Před 2 lety +9

      D&D is a game where you can get hit by 20 arrows and still walk around like nothing is wrong. It's not a game that tries to simulate realistic combat or physics. I think circumventing realistic descriptions for more video game/anime style descriptions is fine. Especially since many video games are based on D&Ds style.

  • @Ilandria.
    @Ilandria. Před 9 měsíci +3

    "How do you kill [it]?" and "How does [it] die?" are two of my player's favourite questions to hear in combat. The description depth they get into when answering those is generally way more visceral than when they describe their own actions

  • @CooperAATE
    @CooperAATE Před 2 lety +35

    Luke was having a good time with the zoom feature, lol

  • @briansanders8122
    @briansanders8122 Před 2 lety +119

    If there's one thing from Critical Role that players and DMs NEED to do, it's descriptive combat.

    • @KnicKnac
      @KnicKnac Před 2 lety +8

      To a certain point. Don't want to bog down the session.

    • @gnarthdarkanen7464
      @gnarthdarkanen7464 Před 2 lety +22

      @@KnicKnac "Can I try to plant the spikey side of my pike-axe into Orc#4's face?" shouldn't bog anything down so much... Then roll, and announce numbers...
      "Orc#4's face rips open with the force of the slash and he stumbles back, nearly sitting right down, but (while you can tell it's obviously obscene, whatever he's saying) he's not dead yet... just REALLY pissed off... and you might be in trouble shortly...
      Also doesn't really bog anything down... Obviously a miss is "You tried X and wiffed it." or similar...
      He said "descriptive combat"... NOT "Shakespearean Purple Prose Combat"... That's all...
      Try nurturing a few technical terms for your Players and GM's to share as a sort of basic standard "jargon" at the table... The difference between a "Crescent Kick" and a "Roundhouse Kick" and "Slashing up and to the right" versus "Hacking straight down", and the like... Called shots would involve specific body parts and/or desired effects... "Trying to decapitate" or "Jam the Spear in his left eye" with relative deficits to hit accumulating based on size and difficulty (the smaller the target, the higher the difficulty, obviously)... AND reward them with benefits, advantages, and effects when they (and their dice) incidentally do well.
      I've almost never done that "Combat quickly and by the numbers" crap... AND I've NEVER had combats really "Bog down", even with relative noob's at the system... ANY system. When we've spent more than an hour and a half on combat, there's been a metric buttload of minions and a pretty serious "heavy" involved... It was going to be a "slog" no matter how it was run... BUT even in a relative slog, my Players (and I frankly) have always been laughing and throwing dice, shouting and swearing, and generally having a GREAT TIME raising all manners of Hell.
      It's how I read the room. If a "Combat Scene" makes the Table sound like we're really in combat, mixed with laughs and engaging faces all around, it's "just about right". ;o)

    • @MeepChangeling
      @MeepChangeling Před rokem +3

      @@KnicKnac Oh yea, dont want this combat game to be combat focused... GO play FATE. D&D is clearly not for you.

    • @tonymaurice4157
      @tonymaurice4157 Před 9 měsíci

      That's why I can't stand critical role, Because every footstep is a committee discussion!

    • @100dayGamer
      @100dayGamer Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@gnarthdarkanen7464 How many times can you do this until it gdts boring though? Eventually you gonna run out of cool descriptions for your characters. Even cool ways to miss

  • @jeffjones4654
    @jeffjones4654 Před 2 lety +70

    D&D should be played like an action movie full of cinematic, pulpy, swashbuckling action and high adventure.

    • @jiminkpen9750
      @jiminkpen9750 Před 2 lety +6

      That's definitely a good way to play it, but other styles work too. It can also work like a horror film, superhero or detective movie. It's not a great system for less combat oriented games but is OK. I'd tend to use a different game for some of the types of games but more people know d&d than other systems so it's easier to use.

    • @josiahdublin7816
      @josiahdublin7816 Před 2 lety +6

      Here's a tip: Go play other systems, Savage Worlds Adventure Edition is perfect for that.

    • @josiahdublin7816
      @josiahdublin7816 Před 2 lety +8

      @@jiminkpen9750 I'm sorry but using D&D 5e to play horror or investigative games is just eh... using D&D to play horror is like putting superman in a horror house or putting him in Gotham City, your PC demigods will just blaze through it.

    • @jeffjones4654
      @jeffjones4654 Před 2 lety +1

      @@josiahdublin7816 You are 100% correct sir.

    • @jiminkpen9750
      @jiminkpen9750 Před 2 lety +2

      @@josiahdublin7816 like I said its not as good for less combat-y games but easily done.
      All you need to do is have no spellcasting classes, next to no magic items (certainly no healing potions) and run it at low level. If you want it very deadly reduce the number of death saves before you actually die. Suddenly you have a system that looks and feels dangerous, monsters are scary and you can create the right sort of atmosphere for your game. I'd also suggest not using a map for combat and keep it descriptive.

  • @ulfhenarv
    @ulfhenarv Před 2 lety +32

    So what would you do in a situation where the roles are reversed? There's an immersive DM but the players just want to have the story unfold in front of them?

    • @olutoyinonayemi1350
      @olutoyinonayemi1350 Před 2 lety +9

      Prune players lol. Kidding, but not kidding. I have one player that's really just there to combat. Instead of trying to force the issue I eventually learned to just accept it. If that's his fun, then let him have it. I can story with the other players and he can follow along and attack. *shrugs*
      If that's your entire table then... you should've had a session 0 lol. Know exactly how much work is in store for you.

    • @mrosskne
      @mrosskne Před rokem

      Tell them to read a book and find better players who actually want to play a game.

  • @igorigor5342
    @igorigor5342 Před 2 lety +21

    11:00 I kinda disagree with you, Luke. You're telling about this novelist stuff and absence of value of players' desisions like it's only black and white. I think it's more in the middle. You can be a storyteller, while giving players some amount of influence over the story. For example, my players never choose quests, but they do choose paths they're going to go, and how to react on encounters. Maybe my playstyle's a bit different from yours.
    To be honest, I usually play with beginers, so they don't know how "the game meant to be played" but I rarely see them not engaged with a story. That also pretty interesting for me as well because I don't know how my story's gonna end

  • @zacharyjamesstrickland
    @zacharyjamesstrickland Před 2 lety +16

    Being a relative newcomer to the D&D scene (2014 was my proper introduction year), I really appreciated hearing about the history of the culture surrounding D&D. The Hickman Revolution was interesting to hear about!

  • @andyreichert499
    @andyreichert499 Před 2 lety +20

    What it ultimately boils down to is that players need to be able to make choices that have weight. Depending on the game and the style, combat may be where the choices have weight and death is a meaningful threat. Or the narrative might be where the player have choices really matter. Combat can be more meaningful than just surviving (the stakes might not be the lives of the players). But a game where player's never lose, and are railroaded outside of combat better have pretty good snacks.

    • @zeph6182
      @zeph6182 Před 2 lety +5

      I feel like there should be a mix of both at any point in the campaign.
      For example if your characters are armed to the teeth and have combat experience in the middle of the campaign they’re probably not going to be afraid of dying to a group of bandits or something, but if said bandits are trying to kill an NPC who is important to the story (or the party at least) the stakes could actually be quite high.
      But there’s absolutely nothing wrong with a powerful enemy like a dragon or some sort of demon who directly threatens the lives of the party. I’d even say it’s not an issue if the party runs into this enemy unprepared and wipes to it.

  • @kyleward3914
    @kyleward3914 Před 2 lety +9

    In my most recent campaign, a player cast Banishment on another player's character. Because where they were counted as another plane, the character didn't just pop back after the spell ended. The guy ended up playing another character for a few sessions until his original character could show back up.

  • @MrFleem
    @MrFleem Před 2 lety +53

    When the party splits and one group gets into combat, I let the players with absent characters play the bad guys.

    • @JB-yg3ew
      @JB-yg3ew Před 2 lety +3

      That's great

    • @silentrobot7014
      @silentrobot7014 Před 2 lety +6

      I can see that going wrong but also very cool

    • @mrosskne
      @mrosskne Před rokem +1

      When the party splits, I don't do anything different. We follow turn order for everyone as usual.

  • @mrgrumpy70
    @mrgrumpy70 Před 2 lety +19

    For descriptions I close my eyes and visualise the scene and then simply describe what I see. Also adjectives, use lots of adjectives.

  • @jamesaust3272
    @jamesaust3272 Před 2 lety +16

    Can't forget dm granted advantage. Whether this is for the specific action or just inspiration, it's a big motivator to players to get creative with their turns.

    • @euansmith3699
      @euansmith3699 Před 2 lety +3

      Indeed, come up with something cool, unique, interesting or fun, and gain Advantage. 👍

    • @DingleDobber
      @DingleDobber Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@euansmith3699 I do that and even the opposite. Giving disadvantage is a lot more rare, it's usually some one to two turn debuff. Like in CoS my players tend to look around for animals, a lot. If they get a nat 1, I'll make them frightened for a minute. It's like they saw something they thought was there, but it (usually) isn't.

  • @Tysto
    @Tysto Před 2 lety +5

    An adventure should have an intro, a motivator, a struggle, a disaster, a bigger struggle, a twist, a final battle, & a conclusion.

  • @lafther210
    @lafther210 Před 2 lety +9

    I often find that adding battle injuries to npcs helps make it more realistic. It’s easier when there’s a description of the attack but a well placed hit could cause some damage that they can’t just ignore without it affecting their movements.

    • @TheRepublic4
      @TheRepublic4 Před 2 lety +1

      Ideas for People
      (For bludgeoning just assume the word break for any limb)
      1. The Enemy Loses an Eye
      2. The Enemy Loses their Hand
      3. The Enemy Loses their arm
      4. The Enemy Loses their foot
      5. The Enemy Loses their leg
      6. The Enemy Loses teeth
      7. The Enemy Loses their ability to walk
      8. The Enemy Loses their tongue (or part of it)

    • @Monster-us5gj
      @Monster-us5gj Před 2 lety +1

      I have an entire system that utilizes wounds and residual damage.

    • @lafther210
      @lafther210 Před 2 lety +1

      To me it is self evident that if someone says they are aiming for the head, that there will be damage of a successful it, rather than a computer game where cutting through arteries doesn't impact anything until the target reaches 0 hp.

  • @DUNGEONCRAFT1
    @DUNGEONCRAFT1 Před 2 lety +27

    Bravo, sir. Exactly what I would say. Long, slow clap.

    • @theDMLair
      @theDMLair  Před 2 lety

      Thanks, Professor Dungeon. Good to see you about. I peak at your stuff from time to time. Very cool.

  • @LordOz3
    @LordOz3 Před 2 lety +5

    The writer equivalent is pantsing vs. plotting. A plotter has an extensive, meticulous scene by scene outline, while a pantser sits down at the keyboard and lets the words flow (which was how my first novel turned into a trilogy). It's not an absolute binary, but a spectrum. Now I generally make a barebones outline of important plot points, and I'm not afraid to deviate if the story goes a different direction.
    As a DM I use a similar method - I have the encounters based on the players' plans prepared for the session, and on the campaign scale I have story hooks tied into the main "story line" and character based goals and flesh things out once I see which bait the players take.

  • @omerbl1996
    @omerbl1996 Před 2 lety +10

    In my homebrew campaign, I decided, and even consulted my first DM about it, that I should have a structure of how the story goes. In any place the pc's will visit there will be things that are related to the big story. But I sure as hell don't tell them where to go. They have the agency to point a place on the map and go explore it. Whatever happens there is the story. BUT, that doesn't mean the things I planned for won't have an impact on the grand scheme, should the party decide to explore it or not. That way I believe is a very good way to bring forth a dynamic, breathing and living world, where ANY choice matters- even those you don't take in the end. I know how the final arc and battle should go. But I'll be damned if I know what the results will be. That's up to the party. The BBEG has a plan in motion, and whether the group will decide to deal with it or not is up to them. But my BBEG isn't going anywhere ;)

    • @robbiejames1540
      @robbiejames1540 Před 2 lety +1

      That's very much the approach I'm trying to take as well :)

  • @IamExtruh
    @IamExtruh Před 2 lety +4

    Hey man, really appreciate every single one of these videos. They have helped me very much DMing for the first time. I always watch your stuff while I work!

  • @jamesaust3272
    @jamesaust3272 Před 2 lety +5

    Having giants that stomp (dex save or fall prone) before attacking is a neat way to spice things up.
    Or maybe they use their club in a sweeping motion and cause AOE effects. Giants can be cool when you spice them up.

    • @true_plays_games
      @true_plays_games Před 2 lety

      It’s incredibly easy to do this and I am surprised more people don’t do this in VTT games.
      You can literally add any effect you want and have it tied into a link:
      *Noxious Belch*
      Creatures in a frontal cone of 15 ft must make a DC 13 CON save or fall prone, coughing and gasping until the end of their next turn.
      Boom an ogre belch action that varies things and keeps it spicy - obviously just an example - don’t use it to punish your players, but stick special stats and abilities on your otherwise vanilla baddies!
      It’s so easy!

  • @evanwhite5704
    @evanwhite5704 Před 2 lety +18

    I have a general rule that I try not to kill player characters until they reach level 5. However, I often find other ways to have stakes, like protecting a beloved NPC or defending a town. Consequences at lower levels don’t mean PC death, but they still are present.

  • @darkanubiss89
    @darkanubiss89 Před 2 lety +2

    Hey man so happy to see how close you are to 100k subs can’t wait for you to get that button!

  • @johnthevampire819
    @johnthevampire819 Před 2 lety +6

    Who is watching it at release time?

  • @Andonios88
    @Andonios88 Před 2 lety +23

    “Use your words” This is a parental like relationship. Luke talks to us like we talk to our kids lol….

    • @hugofontes5708
      @hugofontes5708 Před 2 lety +5

      Surprisingly, or not, for beginners it seems to be essential advice actually

    • @RJeremyHoward
      @RJeremyHoward Před 2 lety +1

      Did you just call Luke your Daddy?
      "You're gonna feel rough at first..."

    • @theDMLair
      @theDMLair  Před 2 lety +2

      Now listen, son...
      :D

  • @user-mr6hc9hy2t
    @user-mr6hc9hy2t Před 2 lety +26

    Jeez, the first 10 minutes of this video is the host re-phrasing "you need the threat of death for combat to be fun" over and over. He even recognized how long and rambling his tirade was, and then proceeded to harp on it for just a bit longer lol.
    I find the point rather trite personally. While I agree that 5e makes dying exceptionally rare, I don't think the threat of death is truly a core element to making combat exciting/engaging. All of the other points mentioned in the video are far more important in my opinion.
    The threat of death alone is simply a numerically challenging encounter style. Which means your characters are more likely to perish, which means you can't get as attached to any PC, and no PC can be as vital to the story narrative as they all need to be replaceable. This effect can actually weaken the narrative overall as your PCs become a bunch of faceless, friendless and detached video game characters who simply fulfill quests because the story needs them to. All character growth, character dynamics between PCs and NPCs as well as the fate of PCs having heavy implications for the world state are gone when the rate of PC death is *too* high.
    As a story invested player, I would lose interest in such an excessively death heavy campaign- unless I went into it knowing it was going to be a light-on-story numerically-challenging dungeon crawl experience from the get-go.
    Of course my example was rather hyperbolic, but I felt that the 10 minute tirade about death being a key element was equally hyperbolic, and almost encouraged an excessively kill-happy campaign at the cost of narrative potential. The reader/player of your story/game *needs* to be able to be invested in characters to care about what is happening.

    • @rdmrdm2659
      @rdmrdm2659 Před 2 lety +4

      I would tend to say more ‘the threat of consequences’, of which death is one. Damage to things or causes the characters care about, for example, could be another. Investment in the result.

    • @kdolo1887
      @kdolo1887 Před 2 lety +6

      Your comment points to the ultimate design flaw in D&D. Its a game of storytelling primarily through combat, but no one wants their character to die. Most people dont go through life looking for a fight, and yet that's exactly what we expect from our characters and our DMs. In many other games, combats are few and far between, where the story is told through some other mechanism. In Call of Cthulhu, it's investigation. In Legend of the Five Rings, it's courtly intrigue. In Shadowrun, it's the heist. In these games, combat is what happens when things go wrong. In D&D, it's expected, even encouraged.
      I submit that, for people with your mentality, D&D is not the game for you. And thats not an insult. I gave up on D&D a long time ago for the same reasons.

    • @user-mr6hc9hy2t
      @user-mr6hc9hy2t Před 2 lety +2

      @@rdmrdm2659 great point, consequence itself is what is important, of which potential PC death is just one. For a story-vested player like myself, consequences to the NPCs and the world around me would be more engaging of a consequence than simply my PC perishing and me slotting in a replacement.

    • @user-mr6hc9hy2t
      @user-mr6hc9hy2t Před 2 lety

      @@kdolo1887 entirely fair- you may be right about a highly story-vested player like myself having a better time with other table top games.
      I do like the concept of story-telling through combat, but that is a good point about the dichotomy between said concept and players not wanting their characters to die.
      There is definitely a balance- I think that PC death can make for some great emergent story telling, but like character death in any story this needs to be done with care. The death only has weight if the reader/players have had time to become invested in them, and the reader/player always needs characters to be invested in. One could ask, if the entire original party of 5 has been replaced, is this still the same story/adventure?
      D&D's very heavy luck elements compound these issues. Although D&D uses a tactical RPG type map, the amount of strategy one has available to them in combat can be quite limited- based on one's class, the enemy, the terrain and the DM's preferences. Too often a PC will effectively do the same things every turn. As a result of the high degree of randomness, even a player who played "smart" and made no mistakes can still lose.
      D&D 5e seems to have recognized this issue, and has made it very hard/borderline impossible for the player to die unless the DM is feeling cruel and has the enemies go for kills on downed PCs. So now the game is stuck in a weird place, where the book describes an incredibly combat heavy game where your characters are in constant mortal peril, yet this isn't reflected in the gameplay.

    • @rdmrdm2659
      @rdmrdm2659 Před 2 lety

      @@kdolo1887 meh. I have no problem whatsoever in any way using that mentality with D&D and it’s various incarnations.

  • @edwardthompson3377
    @edwardthompson3377 Před 2 lety +3

    Pausing at the 9:25 mark, and I have a few points on this argument. It seems to me what you are saying is:
    1) Without chance of death, stakes are not real.
    2) Without explicit stakes, you can't have emergent gameplay.
    Both of these premises ring false. Players can take actions in combat that affect things beyond survival. Who escapes, who is chased down, capture or kill, decide a fight isn't worth the spell slots and flee another direction -- all of these decisions can be made independent of the risk of death, and can create emergent gameplay.
    Also, when I'm watching My Hero Academia, I never think the Deku will die. We are told in the first two episodes that this is the story of how he becomes the world greatest hero. He can't die until at least that moment. Doesn't make the Overhaul fight any less intense. So, the idea that knowing a character will survive doesn't affect a directed experience.
    Taking that idea, how much does it affect an emergent experience. Considering that emergent experiences aren't 100% unpredictable (I don't expect Pokemon to show up in my D&D game), then you can take certain assumptions, such as PC survivability, and still feel the intensity of everything else that is emergent. You can still contribute decisions that make the experience emergent.
    I run a game in which PC death happens occasionally, but I play in a game in which it has never really been an issue. (This has more to do with the DM's incredibly low rolls than anything, but also because she has a more narrative mentality.) We still enjoy the personalities of the villains we fight, and often make decisions that make the DM improvise. Combat is still fun.
    This all table-dependent, of course. I've played in a cut-throat game or two, and those were fun as well. The experience isn't lessened by shifting or lessening the stakes; it's just a different experience.

    • @edwardthompson3377
      @edwardthompson3377 Před 2 lety +1

      You did expand on the stakes a bit more with the four intensities, but during the rant portion that did not come through at all. Four intensities is a very useful tool, though, thank you.

  • @andrewhughel4360
    @andrewhughel4360 Před rokem

    This is so awesome!! This is still literally my first go to and who I still everyone to atleast start with. I can't explain enough enough about how this is so great.

  • @danielpierce4430
    @danielpierce4430 Před 2 lety +10

    My group started playing Starfinder recently and I have to say, we’re really enjoying Paizo’s chrunchier combat system.

    • @HauntedScourge
      @HauntedScourge Před 2 lety

      Starfinder has become one of my favorite systems, the only problem is our group has to homebrew the ship combat quite heavily

    • @mercuryknyght5238
      @mercuryknyght5238 Před 2 lety

      @@HauntedScourge why is that?

    • @frederickcoen7862
      @frederickcoen7862 Před 2 lety

      Yeah, why?

    • @HauntedScourge
      @HauntedScourge Před 2 lety +1

      @@mercuryknyght5238 Unless the combat ends up being short and punchy the "roles" in the many phases of the ship don't have much to do.
      Like there's a list of thing you can do but at earlier levels your looking at 1-3 options and they all come down to a simple check. It takes what's boring about combat in RPGs and magnifies it in my opinion.

  • @Princesspuppies77
    @Princesspuppies77 Před 2 lety +3

    Another good way to practice combat description is to watch an action sequence in a movie or TV show that you like and practice describing it by talking or writing. Watching many will put good action sequences in your mind that you can recall at the table.

  • @clarkside4493
    @clarkside4493 Před měsícem +1

    I have a player running a College of Swords Bard. _Almost_ all he does is make attacks. He rarely uses his Flourishes too. So when 2 gnoll marauders, a gnoll huntsmaster, and 4 hyenas are all clumped up and chewing on the Warlock and Paladin, he's not dropping a _Thunderwave_ or _Shatter_ or anything. No, he's just whittling them away without even Flourishing. I'm cutting the Warlock a _little_ slack because he does only have two spell slots, but even he could stand to throw around some bigger spells too. Those combats went on and on not because the monsters had too many hit points, but because most of the party refused to be more aggressive.

  • @terrychant4365
    @terrychant4365 Před 2 lety +2

    I love he mentions giants. Im running against the giants now and was disappointed with the mm stats. I've been using the special ones in Volo's(?) And making them do things like use nets to control pcs, grappling, and throwing pcs. Little tweaks like that have really helped, especially if you throw a pc off a high ledge towards a rhemoraz below. Gonna try disarms next time.

  • @SpookyGhostIsHere
    @SpookyGhostIsHere Před 2 lety +7

    Love the advice, the length of 5E combat is an interesting beast. If players each have a turn, and if they have multiple competing choices about what to do, then unless they plan what they want to do combat will take quite a bit of time. The only way to really reduce the time is if there’s less time spent on choices, but they requires either limits or experience. It’s a sort of fascinating game design problem.

    • @Gevaudan1471
      @Gevaudan1471 Před 2 lety

      I'll never understand why some folks treat combat as a chore.

    • @SpookyGhostIsHere
      @SpookyGhostIsHere Před 2 lety +2

      @@Gevaudan1471I agree. It’s the game time when most character abilities are being used, so it’s kinda weird that some would think of it as a chore.

    • @nicholascarter9158
      @nicholascarter9158 Před 2 lety +1

      The reason it feels a chore is that initiative, action limits, and miniatures are all departures from the rhythm of the conversation that was taking place leading up to the combat.
      Imagine if exploring a dungeon was still done the old school way: in rounds.

    • @thebeanqueen1669
      @thebeanqueen1669 Před 2 lety +2

      Hmm well it’s only a chore for players that like to focus on RP
      And in that case I love to add mechanics that make the players RP mid combat.
      I ran like a horror boss, where the enemy had a pact with an evil theatre patron, so they had to do certain things like give heroic speeches or flavour their attacks and act like they are in a dramatic theatre show to avoid drawing the ire of the god

  • @nomadrl91x
    @nomadrl91x Před 2 lety +1

    watching these videos has given me more insight in my d&d games. and i thank you for this. i've also come to understand the "story" of a campeign is a byproduct of the DM presenting a problem, and the players answering that presentation. to ignore is a valid answer, (while not wise it is valid)

    • @theDMLair
      @theDMLair  Před 2 lety +1

      Awesome. I'm happy I could help!

  • @MykeySprite
    @MykeySprite Před 2 lety

    This is such a great video LMAO I like that you covered a bunch of stuff that’s kind of TTRPG theory that seem ‘obvious’ but often goes over the heads of most DMs

  • @joshuaarmstrong2445
    @joshuaarmstrong2445 Před 2 lety +5

    I like the idea of putting a sand timer in front of the players and saying "when this runs out it's the monsters turn."

    • @mke3053
      @mke3053 Před 2 lety

      I did it since 2000. It's great! Sadly roll20 doesnt have such a feature.

    • @theanonymousmrgrape5911
      @theanonymousmrgrape5911 Před 10 měsíci

      The final fantasy approach to combat definitely has its merits.

  • @SupermonkeyGH
    @SupermonkeyGH Před 2 lety

    great vid dude! Keep up the good work!!

  • @Arcticmaster1190
    @Arcticmaster1190 Před 2 lety +2

    The first point, I’m already thinking about the encounter I ended on in our last session. It’s the first time, since the party just reached level 7 and I wanted to both: a. Throw them a really tough fight; and b. Reward one of the players for their backstory attention (I’ll have similar quests for others). It’s against a platoon of drow and they are particularly hunting one of the players whose a “free” drow.
    I can’t get too much into all the factors in play but it’s going to be very exciting and risky since Drow typically don’t take prisoners in this case. I’m hoping my players play smart and so far, they are. Ended after the first turn since they took time to prepare and talk with each other before they engaged.

  • @AcePlaysTCGs
    @AcePlaysTCGs Před 2 lety

    Omg I needed to hear this SO bad. I obsess go a crippling degree about being a directive storyteller because it helps me feel like there's some safety in the bumpers.
    My players have always loved my games, but I strengthened my desire for structure through loode improv within the session while behind the screen I was hodgepodging a "big bad" for "Act I".
    Emergent storytelling sounds way more fun and I hope one day I'm able to release the reigns and let the character where they will and react more than feel the need to jump ahead.
    I'm great in the moment, but I'm bad on the spot. I wish I could learn the difference and act accordingly... or at least acknowledge when something is working and roll with it instead of burning myself out worrying about what's coming next.
    Thank you so much, Luke as always.

  • @Lcirex
    @Lcirex Před 2 lety +13

    I'm in the in between on this one. I like a DM to loosely frame a rough plot with the understanding that death is on the table and that some if not all characters will not live to see the end of the events.

    • @nxla6836
      @nxla6836 Před 2 lety +1

      There have been many games that I have run that never got to the end game because the PCs died or took off in another direction.

  • @jeffbostic6660
    @jeffbostic6660 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks for not boring me in a discussion of boring combat! :)

  • @samuelmohrhauser6374
    @samuelmohrhauser6374 Před 2 lety

    I add some descriptions but I think I should do it more. Cause I really only do it for crits and crit fails along with final monster kill or boss kills. I have yet to do it for a pc death. We are on session 14 and this is my first campaign. Had on character get locked in jail of sorts but also had 3 near deaths.

  • @yat282
    @yat282 Před 2 lety +1

    I feel like what you describe in this video about the DM telling a story and removing all the stakes demonstrates the problem with EXU very well.

  • @rogerwilco2
    @rogerwilco2 Před 2 lety +13

    You can have high stakes without having player characters die.

    • @valintinesmith7807
      @valintinesmith7807 Před 2 lety +1

      Would you care to elaborate please

    • @kendrickrochelanzot2053
      @kendrickrochelanzot2053 Před 2 lety

      @@valintinesmith7807 there actually are a few ways, namely the lives of nocs or perhaps political reasons

    • @valintinesmith7807
      @valintinesmith7807 Před 2 lety +1

      @@kendrickrochelanzot2053 those seem very situational and would require a good alignment. I've played in & DMed a lot of games where that would likely not be enough of a consequence to matter. Do you have any other ideas?

    • @Damesanglante
      @Damesanglante Před 2 lety +1

      @@valintinesmith7807 Captured or inprisoned. Saved for meal later. Humiliation and many more. Imagination is the limit !

  • @abelsampaio389
    @abelsampaio389 Před 2 lety +4

    Cloud and storm giants are the most interesting ones out of the bunch for me. After facing slow and dumb ogres and trolls in early levels, I'd surely be scared when a cloud giant suddenly misty steps to close in on the wizard

    • @targetdreamer257
      @targetdreamer257 Před rokem

      Ya want something interesting look up Ogre Goblin Hucker. Range? 150 to 600 when throwing a goblin. Ogre Howdah has a fort on it's back. 4 small size creatures can fit in the fort with 3/4 cover.

  • @SteveSwannJr
    @SteveSwannJr Před 2 lety +4

    Guilty. In one game that I GM'd, I was using a directive method over the emergent method. We ended up stopping partially due to this, and partially the player makeup. I accept the blame and hopefully have learned.

  • @Skronk93
    @Skronk93 Před 2 lety

    one thing that is kind of less well known but works really well is layered maps. just like adding any sort of difference in altitude can by really useful for increasing engagement

  • @primerodeabordo
    @primerodeabordo Před 2 lety

    Great material, great content Luke!

  • @bonbondurjdr6553
    @bonbondurjdr6553 Před 2 lety

    Yeah! I love How-to and foundational GM advice! Keep 'em coming! :D Thanks!

  • @swampgoat6343
    @swampgoat6343 Před rokem +2

    Maybe you'll end up saying this later in the video but I think the best solution to the issue of balancing fights needing stake to feel fun, with the need to have characters progress in the storyline is to get creative with the stakes a given battle presents. Most encounters I have my characters go through have a very real chance of loss, but only in the boss battles is that stake death. As a dm this can also be a way to inject greater motivations into a story. You can couch plothooks into it, and have events trigger that affect things characters care about like their wealth, communities, personal agency, families, or random innocents, or cause them to simply lose out on a cool things they might have gotten. Look at a fight the way you design puzzles with pass fail results of a massive variety rather than just life or death struggles. Going further into that not every encounter that utilizes combat skills has to actually be combat, it can be a game, a gamble, an obstacle course. I should take my own advice more though, and it's all easier said than done :P

    • @nigeladams8321
      @nigeladams8321 Před 8 měsíci

      For me the fun in a fight comes from strategy and thinking how my turn affects my party. For me a fragile PC is one I can't get invested in and I wish that perspective was more talked about by channels like this.

  • @theophrastusbombastus1359

    Fun fact: "The Hickmans" didn't write the Dragonlance novels as Luke suggests. That was the original Ravenloft module
    The Dragonlance novels, however, were written by Tracy Hickman and *Margaret Weis*
    Didn't even take me 20 secs in Google

  • @atinybard6594
    @atinybard6594 Před měsícem

    A thing ive found that really helps my players is dynamic battlefields. If youre just in a room, its a boring numbers game - but if you add some elevation, traps, dangerous areas, difficult terrain, ect.. it makes things much more engaging. Its always players vs. enemies vs. environment.

  • @Gerwulf569
    @Gerwulf569 Před 2 lety

    I usually have a couple of text based RP's going that help me practice the narrative combat stuff. Good tips!

  • @Thagomizer
    @Thagomizer Před rokem

    Utilize the 2e book Player's Option: Combat & Tactics to make combat more lethal. Make full use of the critical hit system, but up the severity by one die category and disallow for saves vs. death to avoid injuries. Since you can still roll low on the severity table, there is always the possibility that a critical won't have any specific effect. This makes combat a heck of a lot more dangerous than just trading swings until someone runs out of hit points.

  • @Sam-shushu
    @Sam-shushu Před 2 lety +5

    I played and ran lots of old school D&D in the old days. Let me tell you, the current game systems and the focus on story are far better and more fun than old days.
    The first game session I ever ran back in the early 80s was a full party wipe because I ran the stats faithfully. The next few weren't much better. To be fair, I was 9, but I was the only GM in my small town, so people were kinda trapped until I could figure it out. Once I got out into the world, I saw very clearly that the only way you could keep players coming back in the figure out how to control the gas pedals so that characters could live long enough to actually have fun. Obviously there needs to be a sense of risk and danger and consequences are real... To this day, I like to keep the players right on the red line, so they have to play smart or fall off the cliff, and when they finally do complete the adventure, the players feel exalted... But the way you stated position felt quite extreme.
    You seemed to be advocating killing characters every session, and wiping out half the party on a regular basis. If that was your actual advice, that's gonna keep a lot of characters out of combat, too, until they can roll up a new character or get rezzed. I'm sure there are a few players out there that want that kind of game, rolling up new characters every session. If so, go for it. Each to their own. But this seems pretty niche. I'm concerned that if a newbie DM takes this advice a little too seriously, and they wipe out their newbies over and over, the group isn't gonna last long. Making a new character (or two or three) every session because the last one died gets pretty boring. That's why in the game Paranoia you had a serial number for a name, so when you died, you could just move to the next clone of yourself, change your secret affiliations, and be done. D&D isn't really designed to handle constant death like that in a streamlined manner.

    • @kdolo1887
      @kdolo1887 Před 2 lety

      If D&D isn't capable of handling constant death, then why is its primary focus on combat? Seems like a glaring flaw to me. Also, like he said, loss doesnt have to mean character death. As he says, assets and strategic position are potentially up for forfeiture, so loss of equipment, standing within the realm, that shiny magic sword, the life of a beloved NPC, or of one that could provide you a clue, all sorts of things can hang in the balance between victory and defeat.

    • @nicholascarter9158
      @nicholascarter9158 Před 2 lety

      @@kdolo1887 consider the number of gun fights Rambo or john McCain has been in, compared to the number of times they've been shot.

    • @persephoneunderground845
      @persephoneunderground845 Před 2 lety

      I think the better point he made wasn't to have death happen more often, but have *defeat* be a real option. Stakes don't have to just be player death, they can be failing a quest objective, letting an important enemy escape, the enemy completing an evil ritual to become more powerful etc. The story still continues, but now you're dealing with a real consequence, a serious setback that the PCs have to deal with. Example from my game: my party was trying to free kidnapped townspeople before they could be taken away and some as slaves. We tried to sneak through the BBEG's lair but failed and ended up fighting him. And lost- when all but one of us was down, we finally surrendered and stopped trying to stop him leaving with the slaves. They left and, when my stealthy character tried to spy on where they were going and got caught, set off explosives, collapsing the exit tunnel behind them. I had to sprint back down the tunnel with explosions going off behind me. We made it out of the lair by the front way and then had to track the slavers to the city where they planned to sell the slaves, and got involved in organized crime intrigue there. So, we failed to free the slaves but had a new appreciation for what we were up against and an evolving story with new challenges to deal with the consequences of our failure.

  • @goberserk5917
    @goberserk5917 Před 2 lety +1

    Number one rule for me when it comes to playing or dm'ing is, if someone isn't dead or dying, you're not having fun. At least when it comes to the BBEG battles. No one wants to just swing their sword back and forth, while wereing a blindfold with no consequences.

  • @Esparc
    @Esparc Před 2 lety +2

    We had a person get pretty frustrated because he didn't get to act in 5 combats in a row. We just kept destroying the enemies before he could reach them.

  • @tscoff
    @tscoff Před 2 lety +1

    Ironically two weeks ago I was trying for a TPK. I was “cheating” a little bit, the monsters were knocking the PCs unconscious instead of killing them, but I was trying to kill every PC and capture them. I got two of them down before they ended up figuring out the weakness of their opponents and winning the fight.
    I wasn’t cheating, I was following the rules. But I was trying for a TPK with the opponents who they were facing! Unfortunately one of the players figured out that the monsters were sensitive to light and they lit torches which gave the monsters disadvantage to hit.

  • @dallasmeeker5577
    @dallasmeeker5577 Před rokem +1

    The only thing i think i dislike about a lot of your advice is it really boils down to the DM putting in 99% of the effort and the Players just doing as they please all the time. One of these days i'd love to see you do a video on how Players and DMs can work together at the same time to enrich the experience (as compared to your separate videos on how to be a good DM and a good Player, which is treated like two wholly separate issues)

  • @alexv3357
    @alexv3357 Před 4 měsíci

    I've used a loud stopwatch sound effect to help lend a sense of haste when players are being slow. And when the players ignore it, they automatically take the Dodge action. They don't ignore it twice.

  • @lookmanohandle
    @lookmanohandle Před 2 lety

    That was an excellent video. Very helpful to me as a dm

  • @Spiceodog
    @Spiceodog Před 2 lety +1

    Yeah, tome of beasts 1 and 2, and the creature codex are really good, though kobald press could buff some of there subclass options for PCs though as they tend to be on the weaker end of things. Except lust cleric ,wyrdsinger, and dragon mage, and maybe even fire or air mage. mwah, beautiful.

  • @apparition668
    @apparition668 Před 2 lety +1

    So here's the thing... there's middle ground between "leave it up to luck" and "the characters are just along for the ride." My players know I will not kill them due solely to bad die rolls. But they know that the story- and their characters- may change significantly based on a spate of bad luck. My players also know I will not hesitate to let them die if they're dumb. But a campaign is more than a really long board game. It *is* a story, and the players are the protagonists. It means they have a bigger role to play in the world than that of the local innkeeper, and the gods are not going to wipe them off the face of the earth simply because the dice were grumpy during one session.

  • @GiblixStudio
    @GiblixStudio Před 2 lety +2

    Having combat with additional strategic objectives is always nice. I ran a necro lair with some undead creatures in septic tanks. When the tanks break and the creatures get loose there is also an explosive toxic gas gradually spreading in the area. So are the PC's going to KO the necro and take him in for interrogation? Are they going to prevent the gas from spreading? Are they taking the necro out, but ignore the gas... causing a massive explosion in the middle of the city? With the gas spreading further and creating some necrotic effects in the direct area. A seemingly simple combat with massive possible outcomes. -- Also spreading PC's is nice. My players invaded a hag's lair. However a creature grappled the druid and teleported to the top of the tower and dropped the Druid. So she was now no longer part of the combat and no longer a problem either. Good luck trying to get back to the fight in time. However you do need to provide the druid with something else to do.
    Threat to the Assets. I love taking a creature from the older edition. Sure you got the Rust Monster. However do you remember the creature that does the same, but to magic items?
    Threats to PC's. How about we bring back enemies that drain levels. However instead of draining levels they now give PC's a level of exhaustion. The Exhaustion mechanic is heavily under used and can ramp up threats fast and drastically. As well as cutting off limbs of PC's that prevents a cleric from both using a weapon AND shield. Choices now have to be made. Regenerating limbs is not that common. When it is they're such high level they can enjoy it for all I care. If a PC dies and they got a nice "story" going I might be nice and let them come back once in some way or another. But after that they're on their own. And using resurrections etc isn't an auto-success either. I use Matt Mercer's way of doing that. With increasing DC to succesfully bring someone back.
    Add Verticality. Too many battles are only in the 2d plane. Even with mini's they often are. Do what you can as DM to make clear the players need to think in 3d.
    You want interesting monsters. Look at Star Spawns and how they work together. You can always level them down to work for lower tier campaigns. They're intense

  • @StargaezrToo
    @StargaezrToo Před 2 lety

    The best compliment I ever got from one of my players. They were all new and so after a couple sessions I asked what their favourite parts of the game was so I could try and add more of those in it. My rogue told me she “loves the descriptions of hits and misses during combat.” That was the best thing anyone’s ever told me as a DM

  • @Battleguild
    @Battleguild Před 2 lety

    An interact-able environment also helps spice things up:
    In a warehouse, maybe there is some suspended cargo that can be cut down or using the winch.
    In a swamp, maybe there is some methane that is bubbling up from beneath the surface that can be ignited.
    In a town, maybe there is a barrel that can be kicked down a slope towards your pursuers.
    Make these interactions work both ways, and maybe the hostile npcs will pull a lever to drop a portcullis that separates the party in combat.

  • @SaffireNinja
    @SaffireNinja Před 2 lety

    A large issue with my group that makes combat longer than it should be is not knowing the description of spells, abilities, etc. Some characters have a lot of abilities and such but with so many websites having a slightly different description, it takes up time during combat to resolve the issue and sometimes arguments. It does cost money to buy spell cards and material for a character but one could always print the info out so it'll always be there.

  • @rakura
    @rakura Před 2 lety

    Thanks for this video.
    4 Rules I put into my game:
    1. Resurrections is like next to impossible to do and in the world there have only been 4 instances in recorded history of it being done
    2. Not all scenarios can be handled with a sword
    3. Critical failures will probably involve something hilarious happening to the person / npc but deadly is rare
    4. Random events may happen like wind change if the players are taking too long to make a decision when the opponents have keen smell. This added a great o shit setup.

  • @shinybugg9156
    @shinybugg9156 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the video! Good tips!

  • @Jake-ct1yt
    @Jake-ct1yt Před 2 lety +1

    For combat descriptions I HIGHLY recommend Joe Abercrombe! The First Law trilogy is a great one to start on

  • @ddtalks2821
    @ddtalks2821 Před 2 lety +1

    (27:25) - Modify your Monsters. Why does a 'Giant' just have to be a big 'fighter' and just hit things. There should be Giant Wizards, and Bards, and Clerics... Every Monster should be like a possible character. This also spices up combat and makes things more unique and unpredictable.
    "Oh look it's a Giant. This should be easy." - A fireball explodes around the party. "WHAT? Where did that come from?" - The Giant chuckles loudly as a grin crosses his face. The party sees his hands waving around forming symbols and a chant of incantations begins....
    Combat Encounters should be 'Party' vs 'Party'. How many player groups consist of all Barbarians, or all Fighters, or all Paladins? Very few (unless specifically designed for that). Why should the Monsters be all one 'class' ? they shouldn't. mix and match. give them varying abilities. This makes Combat more interesting than just 'Swing and Damage'

  • @markgnepper5636
    @markgnepper5636 Před 2 lety

    Great stuff friend 👏 👍

  • @redknight808
    @redknight808 Před rokem +1

    My players are skittish about combat in our current campaign. It's a medium-power sandbox sci-fi setting of my own devising using the Hero System. I don't balance combat (I haven't for years) and I roll everything within view.
    I also enforce the optional Characteristic Maxima to keep PC/NPC characteristics within check. A character's BODY is like hit points, and with the Maxima in place, those "hit points" stay within the 8 - 23 range for an entire campaign lasting 100+ sessions. (For reference, a modern hunting rifle deals 2d6+1 BODY Damage. ) I also don't use any rezzing or the equivalent of healing potions, though my scii-fi includes improved healing times measured in days instead of weeks, as would be normal. I also never make it an absolute requirement to engage in combat.
    The net result is a group of crafty PCs that will only throw in when the stakes are very high. Everyone is alert when weapons are drawn and tension is high. Seven 5-hour session in, and offering an opportunity every session, they haven't felt the need. But everyone seems engaged with the locations and NPCs.
    I doubted myself and asked them if I should "motivate" them more to engage in combat. The answer was a resounding No. The last 99-session campaign (with mostly the same players) had a significant combat every three sessions or so and was under the same Characteristic Maxima and lethality limitations.
    My takeaway is that, if this campaign was a movie, it would be one if those "oh crap! That was a gunshot!" Kind rather than the "BRAKKA BRAKKA BRAKKA!" Type like Commando. If I had to pick, the former is the kind of movie that is interesting to me, and apparently my players. At least this time around.

  • @billcox8870
    @billcox8870 Před 2 lety

    In the game I am in if you get a nat 1 followed by another nat 1, you break your weapon. We have had our armor destroyed by a corrosive acid as well. My cleric is a heavy arms master but the acid wrecked the heavy armor. I don't get those damage resistances at the moment because I only have medium armor.

  • @MsGinahidesout
    @MsGinahidesout Před 6 měsíci

    I just LOVE when you do all the characters!!!!!

  • @Jediknight404
    @Jediknight404 Před 2 lety +1

    This is why I prefer 3.5. Because it's so much easier to die, it makes combat always be filled with more tension. I also find battle music to be very helpful in making combat exciting.

  • @wolfno.7558
    @wolfno.7558 Před 2 lety

    This is a question but my combats are deadly and result in pc death but my pcs have access to resurrection magic now and I am wondering how do I up the tension with that. btw I haven't watch the whole vid at the time of writing this so if it is answered in the vid then sorry.

  • @DrXtoph
    @DrXtoph Před rokem

    great video❤️

  • @dougobrien3361
    @dougobrien3361 Před 3 měsíci

    @the_DM_Lair I wish I could talk to you about how I used a Giant spider nest as a combat area. It's my first time DMing and I think it included a lot of really fun interactions to make combat more interesting. The Giant spider broodmother kept entering and leaving the "cave of webs" to either attack or do a web attack, then run back to safety outside the webbed walls. The spider swarms that followed "mother" around would attack whoever was webbed. The whole floor was coated in webs so it was rough terrane. I wish I could have done more but the players were only lvl3 and they were almost wiped tpk'd as is...
    Well, the mother ran away when things were going south for it. But as the players lit the nest on fire and attempted to escape through the "web tunnel" strung between the trees of the dense woods, The mother was harassing them by doing her hit-and-run tactics again. Webbing them to the wall of the tunnel so the "baby, dinner plate sized, spiders" would attack them while they were stuck. The players finally hit her with a saved action when she came to the wall and she crashed through the web tunnel with her momentum. A great sense of pride came to me when one of the players said "Ohh god, she's dead. I hated her!"
    HAHA

  • @9akisha9
    @9akisha9 Před 2 lety +1

    Adding to character death: For me it depends on the feel of the game and what the group is about. I both like knowing that my character will probably not die, if the party tries to make informed choices. On the other hand there's these games where there are no safeguards. But I like knowing beforehand since it creates a different feel. A Grim dark game will feature death and will rough up the party more often for example.
    But yeah it depends on the party and everyone should agree on how deadly the game is.

    • @9akisha9
      @9akisha9 Před 2 lety +1

      As a side note: I have a player who doesn't want their character to die. They're fine with changing characters. But instead of death they rather have their character be so heavily wounded that they can't participate anymore or have them seem to be dead.
      First I thought: ok if you don't want them to die, why play? But then I remembered that I might not know the whole story and that's fine. They're a friend and we're all here to have fun. The group and I was ok with it, and so we still play.
      Other DMs might have chosen differently. But I think that sometimes it's fine to put "It's just a game" aside and see that behind these characters are still people with different walks of life. We found a solution that works for everyone. And that's the most important.

    • @BlueTressym
      @BlueTressym Před 2 lety +1

      @@9akisha9 Well said. When it comes down to it, we're all people at the table and we all have a right to be heard in terms of what will enhance our fun and what will kill it. That doesn't mean pandering to every whim, especially if those whims trample on others, but it does mean listening and respecting people's feelings. Being a decent person costs nothing.

  • @andresarancio6696
    @andresarancio6696 Před 2 lety

    On the Hickman Revolution, I disagree that there are only two options (either the master has a defined story or does not know where the story is going). In my experience, players get easily tired of both. The best results I have gotten is to have a healthy mix of knowing key story beats (with the possibility of death), having empty spaces where you let the players do what they want, and most importantly asking the players what are they planning to do between sessions. Some players might even have plans for character arcs and where the personality of their characters are going to go

  • @darkfishthedestroyer139

    it would be cool if you can gain advantages or disadvantages based on your description, if you just roll and attack and you have a longsword while your opponent is wearing full plate, its just gonna be a slash by default (not great against armor), but lets say you describe your character preforming a half-swording technique and being able to jam the blade in a gap between the plates or through the eyeslit, surely that would have a chance to do way more damage against the guy in armor, even more so than a slash (im new to dnd, does this already happen in game or is it done in a different manner)

  • @rosemarotta3320
    @rosemarotta3320 Před 2 lety

    In one campaign I hope to return to, I play a necromancer that uses toll the dead & shatter. I looked up sound effects for both those spells and the first time I cast either spell in combat I play the effect.

  • @slimee8841
    @slimee8841 Před 2 lety +2

    The rogue is so weird without the cloak and his stabby stabby dagger. At least he's still saying that the barbarian sucks

    • @PMMagro
      @PMMagro Před 2 lety

      Sssh he is in disguise!

  • @MikaeruDaiTenshi
    @MikaeruDaiTenshi Před rokem

    Most of the times, I try to describe how I attack, or how I move or what I say before attacking. I even once tried to use spellwords for casting spells to make it more interesting.
    There's also different arguments that could be made: Plan your turn AHEAD of time.
    I agree, that it makes the battle more fluent and interesting, if you don't start to plan your turn, WHEN it's your turn.
    I try that, it doesn't work that well, because I also want to know what's going on on the battlefield, which means I try to listen to what the other players or enemies do.
    Since a round of combat happens in 6 seconds, one could argue, that you don't have time to "react" on what your whole group does, which means you don't need to listen to the player's turns, unless they do in fact, affect you. But you should have at least a rough idea of what you can do and want to do, and only change the course of action slightly depending on your surroundings. If too much happened on the battlefield and you don't know what to do right now? Have something prepared you can always do, and do that, while planing or in preperation for your next turn.
    Martial Classes can become somewhat boring during combat, because there's not THAT much of a variety they can do. And yes, they can do more than simply "attacking".
    The worst case for martial classes, is if the combat starts with the enemies being 100ft or more away from you, and you're a melee-fighter, watching the ranged fighers/casters to kill every enemy that's closest to you at the moment. (I had that once...)
    This only affects you, if you're playing the martial class.
    Next are the casters that simply don't know their spells.
    It would be wise to have a cheat-sheet of some sorts with spells that could be used in certain situations. Or just dividing/marking them in certain groups, so it's easier to pick your spells in combat.
    Also, it helps IMMENSIVELY if casters know what spells they have and AT LEAST partially, what those spells do.
    I played enough with spellcasters that were like "oh, I didn't know I had that spell" or "I only read the first line of the description" (and know imagine this with a spell like Phantasmal Force, just as an example.)
    This only affects you, if others play the caster class, because you're "forced" to watch them decide.

  • @ddtalks2821
    @ddtalks2821 Před 2 lety

    (22:00) - Banishment : you can have them start a separate combat for that individual (or some other scene) and flip flop as needed. This way they are still engaged. Also, encourage the players to attack the bad guy that cast the spell to break concentration and thus getting the player back before 'time' is up.
    Wall of Force : Hopefully there is a way around the wall to re-engage in combat. If not, the players need to have the ability to bring down the Wall (casting spells, disrupting caster, etc) Again, encourage the players to find a solution and quickly.
    Polymorph : Have the players go and hit the polymorphed player (assuming it was polymorphed into something small and 'helpless') This drops the HP = 0 and reverts the player.
    These are tricks that PLAYERS should learn how to 'defeat' these spells (or any spell they know) as they could be used against them.

  • @NefariousKoel
    @NefariousKoel Před 2 lety +2

    One of the reasons I tend to enjoy crunchier & deadlier RPG systems. Instead of a large HP pool to slowly whittle down, like chopping a tree, some or all of the hits have actual effects. Often more descriptive ones within the system, too. Can even shoehorn those hit & crit tables into D&D if need be.
    Games like Warhammer Fantasy RP/Zweihander for the descriptive crit tables and hit locations for those big or final blows. Against The Darkmaster/HARP which lend more details and effects for every hit. Even those which often provide extra die result spends for doing special moves and results such as the AGE system, Genesys/Star Wars FFG, and Conan 2d20 (which also has hit locations). They tend to exchange the large amount of repeated die results for fewer per combat, but with more leading descriptions of a cinematic nature on each. Still requires some improv but gives you a starting point.

  • @chrisreinhart5472
    @chrisreinhart5472 Před 2 lety

    what do I do when people die though like their are 4 players what if 1 person gets bad rolls and dies in the first combat or even worse 2 do we keep going with half of the people out of the game do we call it should I restart combat

  • @callmemeta9724
    @callmemeta9724 Před 2 lety

    One way to include the Banishment spell is to simply ignore the clauses about "harmless demiplane" and "incapacitated". A High Cultist of Elemental Evil may banish a player character to the Plane of Elemental Fire where an Efreet awaits them, ready to annihilate them. A Lich may banish a player character to Thanatos, the domain of Orcus where they have to slay hordes of undead while their allies attempt to disrupt the Lich's concentration.
    Not only does this give that player something to do and raise the tension a bit, but it gives the players a glimpse of the world outside of the Material Plane to places they may want to visit later. The only downside I have seen is that the players may want to take Banishment if they think that their casting will have that same utility, and they could be upset when you attempt to explain away the reason why these particular spellcasters can use it differently.

  • @mikhielbluemon4213
    @mikhielbluemon4213 Před 2 lety

    One thing to add: Brutal combat is fun but never make anything hopeless. Always have that bit of hope on the horizon or some constant tactic yo assist.
    When I ran Dungeon of the Mad Mage, as it's mostly a long Dungeon with a few breaks, I added a mechanic that every step they took, they healed 1 hit point. This made the combat a lot more active with players, even spell casters, acting intelligent but not cowardly.
    Something else I added were rooms with odd symbols that if you matched it's Alignment, you gained a Boon and if not, you gained a weakness of some kind.
    There were already symbols in DOTMM but they felt very rear so I added more.
    Another thing to do is remove the death saves, if you drop to 0 hp, you're dead. However to balance this, add their Proficiency to their AC, making their lv progression feel more impactful.
    Take and leave what you will.