this post was submitted on 05 Feb 2024
15 points (100.0% liked)
DM Academy
712 readers
1 users here now
A community for discussion, questions, tools, or advice regarding being a Dungeon Master (or Game Master) for Dungeons and Dragons or RPG's in general
/c/DnD Network Communities
- Dungeons and Dragons
- Dungeons and Dragons - Art
- Dungeons and Dragons - Homebrew
- Dungeons and Dragons - Memes and Comics
- Dungeons and Dragons - AI
- Dungeons and Dragons - Looking for Group
Rules (Subject to Change)
- Be a Decent Human Being
- There are 4 types of posts here, Questions, Advice, Articles, and Tools; Stories belong in !dnd@lemmy.world
- DO NOT Downvote simple or beginner questions, this is a space for EVERYONE from beginners to advanced DMs
- No Piracy, this includes links to torrent sites, hosted content, streaming content, etc. Please see this post for details
- Zero tolerance for Racism/Sexism/Ableism/etc.
- No NSFW content
- Abide by the rules of lemmy.world
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
This is an interesting question, and I will probably think on it to create some sort of flexible framework.
Off the top of my head perhaps something like this: for every ‘x’ amount of distance traveled across the world, the party rolls 2D6. On any double they get a worldmap encounter. You can make any kind of chart you like but I think “1=social encounter/merchant” and 2-6= increasingly difficult combat encounters” feels right.
You may privately split the world into zones so you can have some appropriate combat encounters already written up. So that a combat encounter in snowy mountains will be different than one on a tropical beach. You won’t be making up area appropriate encounters on the fly that way.
Difficultly may also scale in zones. In the area near the BBEG castle the result of a “2” will be more dangerous than elsewhere for example. You might roughly communicate this to players so guide/motivate them as needed.
Perhaps allow a perception or survival roll for them to either start with advantage in the encounter or even be able to avoid it if they wish.
Thats a very rough off the top of my head idea though.
I've always done a d12 for every day of travel. A 1 is some sort of non-combat encounter, an 11 is a roll on an easier encounter table, and a 12 is a roll on a harder encounter table- I let the players roll everything, usually. They like the click clacks.
It's always worked decently well for me.