RNW makes such pretty stuff, love to see people using them. I was gifted a whole DM's pack for my birthday last year.
@Roll4Initiative
4 жыл бұрын
I've also found their cheat sheets very helpful like the one on combat I usually keep nearby when I'm running things to be able to hand to players if they need a reminder
@collabswithoutpermission
4 жыл бұрын
@@Roll4Initiative I'll have to look that up!
@c.d.dailey8013
5 ай бұрын
Oh. That is interesting. I play DND in two places. One is home, where I play on my own. I am one olayer, and I become my own DM. The other place is at school. There is a DND class. The students are players. The teacher is the DM. In both places I just write down a list of my spells. On a notebook paper. Then that goes with my character sheet. I just write down name and spell level. This is very minimal. I get spell details by looking it up. At school I bring my Player's Handbook. I just look up my spells in the back. It is actually not that difficult or time consuming. I can easily figure out and look up my spell when it isn't my turn. I encourage all spellcasters to do preparation ourside thier turn. It speeds up gameplay and makes combat more fun. I have even seen that advice in other videos on DND. When I am at home, I use cards to look up the details of spells. I prefer using cards. The reason why I don't use them at school is that they can get messy and lost. They also take up extra space in my backpack. So they are not great for playing on the go. I like to imagine a way to mix RPGs and TCGs. DND is the main RPG. Yet cards is used as a suppliment. That fascinates me. There are cards used for spells. That is very helpful for looking stuff up. It is more convenient than looking up in the book. There are also cards for creatures. Come to think of it, these things are familiar. Magic the Gathering is the main TCG. A typical deck has about one third reasource cards and two thirds spell cards. Those are the two main types of cards in a typical deck. Some decks deviate from this and get a lot of artefacts. However that is the exception to the rule, and it is a very niche thing. Resource cards are used to fuel other cards. They are called land cards. DND doesn't have anything like this. The closest is spell slots, but that is still a very different mechanic. The spell cards are divided into creature spells and non-creature spells. Creature spells are used for summoning a creature. They can easily be thought of as another group of cards entirly. However they are technically spells. This is like the mobster cards in DND. Magic the Gathering has non-creature spells. These are spells with a variety of effects. They don't summon creatures. These are like the spell cards in DND. The end of this video got into spell slots a little bit. I would like to know more. I think they are a pain to track. At school, the DM tracks spell slots for the players. At home I have a house rule of using mana instead of spell slots. Mana is more flexible to use and it is easy to track. I use percentile dice to track health and mana.
@VsevolodTheTabletopCrafter
3 жыл бұрын
I've made my own tracker! Just cardstock 😂 Thank you for video ❤️
@Realmisskrose
4 жыл бұрын
I use an app for spell tracking the only downside is the one I use resets your spells once you level up and sometimes I forget to wait to update my level till after we rest so I'm trying to remember how many spell slots I had left and what spells I had used.
@Roll4Initiative
4 жыл бұрын
What's the app?
@Realmisskrose
4 жыл бұрын
@@Roll4Initiative Spell Tracker: Pathfinder Edition, there is a subscription in the app that does more stuff but just use the free version
@BenSilber
4 жыл бұрын
What divider did you use in your rook / raven notebook @ 7:04 ? I've been looking for something similar during my wait to receive my GM diary
@Roll4Initiative
4 жыл бұрын
I got it from The Rook & The Raven in an order from them (I think it was a freebie as I haven't seen it in their store). They do have larger dividers you can order that look to be the same material
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