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TPK, TPK, TPK... She even wrote a christmas carol about it! I believe she'd do it. No Scrolls of True Resurrection lying around, forgotten since 3.5, bit still usable.
Thats fun 🤭 i Play with 2 Sets and 2 big d20. 1 Set in a Happy color for good intentet rolls ans one in a evil color , that i do Not feeed so it rolls as evil as possible, for enemie rolls ans stuff. And the 2 big d20. One is blue the other Red. These i roll visible for players in Special situations. Like the red one if the hit would down a player or the blue one if the player get something nice.
I have a dm like that, and honestly, it's great! I love the impact of those moments. I know he has more dice 😂 it just feels really cool to know we're getting into something big
as a beginner DM, I have, - the basic DM screen from wotc - the AC and the passive perception of the players - a list of words to describe attacks so I don't repeat myself too much (which my players told me I was doing after the first two sessions) - my laptop to search for things I don't remember and stats block of ennemies - blank pieces of paper to write inportant stuffs or fights - a set of dies, only one, we're low levels so it's okay for now - a beer (important) and a small bowl for my part of aperitifs - a small note with "you can do it" written on it
@@GinnyDi It reminds me of PDM--always making those combat rolls in front of the players. It's a great policy on so many levels. Also, after 40 years of DMing--a minimalist approach to what is behind your DM screens is what I've found that works best, too. You're already keeping track of so much in one game session and doing a lot of on the fly decision making. The less visual clutter you're dealing with the better. As for your miniatures and your pile of shame--don't feel bad. I have well over 1000 unpainted miniatures in mine. Just a request, I'd love to see more of your painting in videos. The last one you did was fantastic. You don't have to be Lyla Mev or Sam Lenz or Ninjon or the many other fantastic youtubers out there who are out there. That can be really intimidating for some folks. It's cool to see how it's just fine to have well-painted tabletop ready figs--it doesn't have to be competition level.
The Sword bit never gets old. Its become something I look forward to in your videos. "How will it get worked into this topic"...I loved the "There will be no survivors" affirmation
Knowing that even DM with such a huge audience replaces monsters with something like Funko-pop makes me feel so calm. Thank you for that info! Missing some expensive stuff often makes people stop their imagination.
😂😂 I can't believe I left that out! Though, to be fair, the only way to get your own Ginny Di is to pick up one of my adventures… it didn’t seem like practical advice! 😅
My solution for my minifigures has always been Legos. Players can customize and enjoy it. I can use a variety of creatures and customize things for each session. Any to top it all off, I have a reason to buy all sorts of strange sets just for minifigs and creatures!
I DM for my 10 year-old and his friends, and we use LEGO minifigs. They are customizable and with his assortment we can make up all sorts of variety, and easy enough to snag one to stand in for a generic NPC, monster, summon, etc. I also use the green baseplates, trees, and some rando things for rocks. There is a LEGO D&D subreddit that has some pretty intense ideas, but I don't go that crazy. I also don't get too pedantic with distances, I'm DMing for kids, but it helps to give the relative distances and locations and that is good enough. Plus it is just fun.
Hey! I didn't realize anyone else did that! Me and my friends all use Lego for our characters. It's not a perfect solution (particularly for nonhumans), but when we've got two people who know a ridiculous number of minifig parts and 30-ish drawers of loose parts to search through, we make it work.
@@LadyBoldly and dont forget there's a QR code on the blind boxes that tells you whats in them! (because blind boxes can burn in hell alongside digital lootboxes)
Always dropped by one of her characters to start (she's always carrying it, after all) and the stat block could differ based on the needs of the campaign, like finding the perfect video to help you with your next session.
This can be a cursed item, So players will not be able to get rid of it so easily, And when they explain it they'll end up saying: And this is why I'm always carrying a sword!
Best program to track monster HP and imitative is boring old Excel spreadsheets. With a bit of cell function and formatting knowledge you can set up a great system. Bonus is you can prep at work and look like you are doing something really important for the company
High five, paid-to-make-campaign-stuff-at-work buddy! I've got an Excel book with different sheets for every major location my players might go to (with maps and notes), plus more with special encounters. The first sheet is an index with links to the sheets as well as links to websites I might need for quick reference. The office printer is also useful for printing out small battle maps.
was going to say the same thing. i put all creatures into a sheet and they have input box areas where any numbers i enter there, will subtract from their totals. Our character sheets are also excel based.
was just coming here to say this exact thing. i keep the statblocks somewhere else (digital or physical depending on time/monster) but i track hp on an excel sheet that has all the npc's for an encounter. saves me the time and effort of doing math because i can just type the most recent damage into a table and it subtracts from the total. add some automatic coloring to show
Not me looking at the custom screen site knowing FULL WELL I only play digitally with friends states away... but like MAYBE just a look. Awesome video, Ginny! Thanks for letting a newbie DM take a look behind the screen!
Haha, I feel you! 👀 You could just take a peek… you know, for inspiration (and definitely not to fall down the rabbit hole of wanting a full custom setup)
Have you tried Owlbear Rodeo for digital mapping in online games. I run one of my games online, and use Owlbear Rodeo. With free add ons it can track AC and HP, and you can hide these from the players.
Dice, dice tray, laptop, binder with item cards and loot for the session, notepad & pen for initiative and scratch paper, a bundle of plastic tokens for DM inspiration, and a monocle.
My game is online theater of the mind style game so my "DM screen" is a Notepad file with the important story beats and encounters, an initiative list with momster HP. Keeping it minimal allows me to focus on the important things and keeps the ADHD at bay.
We used spare dice instead of plastic counters or minis. It was great, because you could say, "The D4s are goblins, the D6s are orks, and the D12 is a troll." and you can set them on different numbers to tell them apart if need be.
I keep everything on my laptop. Notes, Stats, art, even dice. Nothing is printed except very important magic item's that the players may get during the session. (Oh, and I keep the DM screen upside down. Because its a Spelljammer screen and there is no "up" and "down" in space when outside of the hill sphere of a planet)
Behind my screen, I've got a beverage (or I'll lose my voice by the end of the session), monster hp on index cards, a summary page of my party's stats, as many dice as I might need to roll in session, and my laptop stand that has space for about 4 books under it. Minis, maps, and props are generally stashed somewhere close by, and my screen has a slot on top I use to track initiative.
I'm old enough that GM screens were just flimsy cardboard things without any info on them. Then I spent years playing with a GM who was really into theater of the mind, and didn't believe in screens, maps, or minis (and his homebrew system supported that). Since I've been GM'ing myself, I like a screen with some info, and I'm starting to consider commissioning a hand-made one like yours, so thanks for the inspiration!
good idea on that benny hill theme... i never thought i could use that for my grimdark setting... warhammer 40k... deep inside a derelict space hulk and yet somehow my players managed to make me use that song and it fitted the situation perfectly... the capacity of some players to turn anything, anywhere, into a benny hill sketch is amazing
i love your one-shot binder, especially the spell card pages! i usually have: - dice tray with a couple sets of dice - bluetooth speaker - tablet with buttons for music/ambient sounds/lighting scenes - printout of my session plan (if i have one lol) - binder of hand-drawn paper maps (i number them and keep them sorted so i can actually find them) - laptop with my campaign notes, combat tracking spreadsheet, and books/rules references - sometimes random cards or printouts for specific crunchy rules, depending on the system (gotta have the pathfinder 1e grappling flowchart lol) - pencil and index cards - box of paper minis
Welcome to the in-person digital map club! I use a 65 inch tv built into my game table and use a program called Arkenforge for maps and sound effects. FYI, if your players like bows, get a big screen, they'll love you forever!
This video has impeccable timing. I finally got a small group to DM for and I’ve been trying to find some pointers on what I should look into getting and using.
I usually don't use a screen anymore, because I find it muffles my voice or otherwise kinda gets in the way. But when I'm gaming out on the porch, usually I have a little dice box, a notebook and pen, the minimum number of books to run whatever I'm doing, and a cheap thin hardcover book that's not important to use as a hard surface to put the notebook on. Oh, and printouts of stuff that I never end up needing. I should stop doing that. I used to have a lot more stuff, but I think minimalism makes me less anxious.
I have been looking into making my own DM screen so this is perfect. Also for minis, I use my bottle cap collection. my players like to choose the ones with dragons that I've found or their favorite sodas
Місяць тому+7
There's a certain set of online _tools_ for _5e_ that is absolutely amazing for running the game even if you don't use it for activities that ought to need an eyepatch and a shoulder parrot. The customizable DM screen module is particularly amazing: the initiative tracker tracks monster HP, conditions, etc..., rolls initiative and HP for the monsters if you want it to, you can set it to show AC and PP too, set up a default party, pre-set encounters, shows the monsters' statblocks when you hover over their names... frankly it's so good it could be sold as a separate product, but it's completely free.
@@bargik If you google "tools for 5e" it should show up. If that doesn't work, try "5e tools." You might also consider putting a period between the second set of search terms.
i love the idea of having a little laminated sheet and dry erase marker to quickly write initiatives of everyone pinned to the back of the screen. Sometimes remembering stuff like that can add another layer of being overwhelmed so anything I can do to help me focus and also enjoy myself is ideal
I use a clear 8.5x11 sleeve with a printed 0-30 initiative scale HP tracker in it. That clips inside my binder (on the left side) and I write the initiative on that with wet-erase markers; green for my PCs and red for enemies. I prefer the wet erase markers bc they don't rub off and make me lose track of everything, lol.
The way I was THIS close to plan out a way to get my hands on a TV for the sake of the map part of the video just because of how cool it sounded, only to realise (fortunately in time) that I have only ran online D&D as a DM.. ever. Definitely an idea I will be keeping though
Truly the mark of an experienced DM's space: Notepad, dice, reference material (ie laptop/book). Never let anyone tell you you aren't doing it right, you've landed where the 20-30 year vets landed.
only one thought - 20+ year vets don't usually bring books. most of everything needed is either in their head or on a few index cards as reference notes. as a GM of 45+ years, I almost never bring source material or rulebooks to the session.
I picked up Scrivener to help with my fiction writing and quickly realised it was also perfect for organising roleplaying campaigns. It was great for creating file structures for organising all the different notes from mission ideas, NPC descriptions and world building notes.
Being rickrolled at an angle of less than 29 degrees does not count as being rickrolled. If it were, just imagine the existential horror of 1980s dance floors!
@sebastianevangelista4921 every woman should be strong enough to carry her emotional support human, lest she find herself in a Women of Weinsberg situation.
@@matthewkreps3352 Oh good, then we're already prepared. My girlfriend tested out if she could pick me up and could. In fact it turned out to be actually useful that time she was taking care of me after a minor surgery and I nearly fainted. :P So yeah, it's a useful thing to be able to do!
I make A8 notecards for all of the items I give my players, it really helps them keep a smaller table footprint and every characters items can be easily traded with others without having to erase things from their character sheet. I also use physical coins which is an investment for sure but it is a lot of fun to dump a handful of coins and item cards on the table and watch the players figure out how to divide the loot. I no longer need to remind players to deduct gold when buying things and it saves the character sheets from getting the classic eraser holes.
I'm enjoying your videos. A good perspective and a healthy dose of humor added to the stack. For live role-playing: DM screen, pad of scratch paper, laptop with notes in OneNote (if you have access to MS Office, OneNote is a great Notebook. Links, expand/minimize note sections, tables, and such). Excel spreadsheet with a simple add/subtract function for tracking damage. Electronic dice (I'm old and got past the dice addiction long ago when the world was young, that and the random function is fine for a game). Source materials on the laptop JIC. Electronic role playing on Roll 20 base. Just the R20 interface on large monitor and hit point tracking spreadsheet on the other. And adult beverages and hummus as needed. I think you're doing a fine job of presenting the information in an entertaining manner without too much grand standing. Look forward to more videos.
I'm a clipboard DM. I can run our group's typical 3-4 hour session off of a page that's half notes and half scratch paper, and monsters stats on the page beneath. I usually keep any maps, props, and additional surprises in another room or something. No DM screen needed! Back when I DID use a screen, I found myself only using it for the status conditions. But if I ever do it again, maybe I'll reconsider!
Just when I think you can't top my favourite video you make another one I love! Seriously, loved the first reveal! The magic 8 ball and the monster sports drinks were a nice touch. The screen you and your dad made was very cool! Keep up the great work.
I can type just fast enough to usually keep up with transcribing conversations verbatim, so long as I'm not involved. Obsidian lets me easily hotlink keywords on the go, or go back and update them. I can't even count the number of times I've been able to search my entire backlog of notes for one very specific detail someone couldn't remember from 15 sessions ago. Pen and paper never had a chance! It does get points for vibes, though. If I was playing in-person and technology wasn't allowed, I'd definitely use a spiral-bound notebook and treasure its weathered pages.
@@maxschendell7630 I guess you can, a friend of mines wife told him he can not buy any more dice ... So he backed a kickstarter for an adventure, its not his fault they give free dice with it
Our DM has a custom table with a large tv hooked up to his laptop for map projection. It also has lights he turns colors for the mood and built in speakers. Its pretty awesome.
Okay, i have a friend given DM screen, and behind it: - whatever drink is on todays menu - a bowl of whatever snacks people brought - a plain notebook with a proper pen of the day - at least two sets of dice, but could be more - a tablet with the info of the characters, campaign, encounters, etc. with the screen split in half and on the other side of the screen i manage the music that sounds from the little but powerful speaker placed in front of the screen - my phone, to ask some cheeky questions to players during the session
Your bright personality and cheerfulness is getting me more and more into D&D. Do you run stream sessions anywhere? Would like to see you in action with a group
Love your setup. Mine is a sketchbook with my notes and hand drawn (badly) maps, dry erase pens plus pencils, and blank index cards for a variety of things like status conditions, clues the players discover, monster toughness and parry scores for Deadlands that the players can reference,mini maps made up as needed, plus other uses… My handiest tools are those blank index cards now that I’ve thought about it.
I'm so relieved to hear that you're not a phony dice goblin pretending to be obsessed over shiny math rocks. Also, if you ever want to do more "let me show you some more of my dice collection" videos, I will enjoy them unironically. Also, my Deck of Boons and Banes is supposed to arrive Friday, so yay! #GetGinnyToTheFeaturedTableAtB&N
Yay, the return of Mite! Good to see her getting a head... or three. Loved the look behind the screen, I've been working on my note taking so always good to see useful ideas.
2:56 I appreciate that you are finding the right blend of technology that serves your needs, rather than forcing yourself to use the shiniest tech no matter what. Bravo.
Seeing the easy build of that digital table gave me an idea. A plexiglass on top you can use markers to draw on and wipe off would be useful for certain area's with affects or even for the players to use for strategy planning and for a public note for all to read and/or add important information for the party.
Thank you very much, very comprehensible and amazingly well organized. I have a strong tendency towards paper, which is why I often write everything down (in widely varying degrees of detail). The downside is that my basement is overflowing with folders full of scribbled notes from my games as a GM and as a player in perfect, albeit chaotic, harmony. And that's despite the fact that I digitize a lot of things afterwards, but I still have space and I don't have a problem for that long. I'm right about that! When it comes to music, I prefer soundtracks for campaigns, as these are perfect for providing background and character music if you avoid familiar themes (The easiest way to lay wreckage to your storytelling is to play the „Raiders March“ and watch your players react.) And I prefer paper rulebooks because I tend to get lost in PDFs.
I absolutely love how easily you've justified your sword as a business expense. Great video! I really relate about having a laptop but generally using pen and paper where possible. I tend to print out all the statblocks and draw a little rectangle next to them to mark hitpoints, like an 'encounter sheet' instead of a character sheet. It takes a tiny bit more prep to print it, but it absolutely speeds things up for me at the table compared to typing the number changes. That said, modifying hitpoints constantly makes me yearn for a system that doesn't use it, but nearly every tactical system does involve hitting the bad guys... well, at least it's enjoyably analog!
I started being VERY detailed about each session, trying to prep as much material as possible and keeping it all behind the screen for “easy” reference After almost two years I’ve digievolved into the kind of the dm who either hyper fixates on a single npc and builds them as an actual character, keeping everything up to date and building entire cities because of them, or I improve literally the whole session and have my players keep note of every random name I have to come up with So far so good, the perfect balance is a whistle away from making me fall in the depths of absolute chaos
Ah, good. I bought signal whistles with my adventuring gear, one for each party member. Now we can bluff the tin whistles if we have to. TOOT TOOT, Zhents!
Something I can't live without is a little table I made and printed out that tells me what skills each player has trained, that way I have the ability to quickly tailor check types and DCs to the characters in the moment.
Thank you for the video, I always love all your stuff! As a new DM who is trying super hard to be organized when I am not an organized person, it's so interesting to see what you as a veteran DM have behind your screen! For combat tracking, I've found improved initiative to be perfect for me. I do a lot of homebrew monsters and it not only covers initiative order, abilities, spells and conditions etc but also allows me to create the monsters right in their very intuitive software without having to use other stat block creators.
Thank you, I appreciate thevpeek behind the curtanin. It was surprisingly normal. I was not expecting scandalous, just more higher end stuff. Everything is attainable/ you can make what you have work. I am planing out my first campaign. Watching this video, definitly took some pressure off.
Having a sword on hand is good. Having a casting g of fireball whe. The whole table argues with the ruling is priceless. For everything else- there are the daggers.
Great video Ginny. You've embraced a lot more tech than I have. :-D My DM Screen is still an old school foldable cardboard with the combat rules. Behind my screen: -- two bags of dice (each about the size of a Crown Royal bag) -- pen and paper for quick notes -- combat stat sheet for tracking monster and character HP -- music player connected to bluetooth speakers -- my laptop handy for my extensive world and campaign notes -- a notebook with maps, special magic items, custom monsters, and NPC data and sketches -- the core rulebooks
I used to run session with a dice cup and dice tray because I don't quite trust myself with rolling dice just with my hand. It worked, but it left me with limited space, considering I have either the campaign module behind my screen, any notes that I need and my phone for tracking initiative and time. I finally got a really nice folding dice tower at a convention and it feels just as good as my dice-tray combo and leaves more room than before.
Fun video! Gonna do as prompted at the end and describe my setup. I ended up getting one of those cloth dice bags with 9 compartments. Seven of them hold 40ish of each normal D&D die size and the other two hold 4 or 5 of each of the 7 additional DCC funky die sizes. My dice tray is a faux leather 11" hexagonal design, camel color, and I keep a yellow lined 4x6" sticky note pad for mostly inititative and HP tracking. I like the colored status rings with the condition written on them, so one box of those. A shoebox full of minis is usually on a nearby chair, rulebooks and monster cards/spell cards in another. No adventure books, but a smaller bag of random generation dice and some cards, like the Oracle Story Deck, combine with my psychotic mind to randomly create every aspect of my games. I actually don't use a screen but let everyone see my rolls if they want... I enjoy their reactions to them LOL.
I think the most fun I had DMing was the Edge of the Empire game. In almost two years of monthly games, I never had to open the rulebook, the dice did all the talking. Everything was rolled openly, so I didn't have to have space behind the screen for much secret rolling. I had some NPC cards, note paper for hit points, a set of Rory's Story Cubes for winging it (which was most of the time), a 3x5 card with session notes, another with NPC names, and one set of percentile dice for winging NPC reactions. Super lean and mean. Back to D&D and I'm kind of panicking because of all the stuff I'm worried I'll need, but your video put me at ease, so thanks! 😊
Love the vid! I'd be interested in seeing one about what your session prep looks like (across the spectrum). I spend multiple hours each week preparing for my sessions (fully homebrewed campaign), and while I don't want to reduce the amount of work I put into the sessions, I would enjoy reducing the amount of time I put into them, its exhausting!
Thanks for the video! I use folded index cards with numbers for initiative tracking that the players set in front of them facing me with the bad guys in order on my DM screen. I also use a small dry erase board for tracking bad guy HP, legendary actions, ect. A fellow DM I play with has also adopted the dry erase board and they love it as well.
Great video! I used to use pencil and paper for HP as well, but these days I find a spreadsheet works best for me. I have a template saved with each party member and their AC in their own row. When I want to prepare for a combat, I just fill out rows for monsters with AC, HP, Attacks and any other abilities so it's all there for me to reference at once. When it's time to roll initiative I just fill in those values and I can sort by that column. Easy peasy.
I've not been a DM for long, but I have been an online player for years. The more I experiment, the more I realize a good D&D tool needs: - to be minimal and intuitive, so you don't have to think about how it works during the game - to be flexible and hackable, so the tool adapts to your game and not the other way around - to mostly offer features that speed up the game and compensate your own weaknesses With that said, I present you my three favorite tools: - Raw text files and a good search utility - Spreadsheets to track monster stats and HP - Owlbear Rodeo :)
I use my GM screen for the occasional chart or table. But mostly I use the folded screen to cover my clipboard/notes when I go to the bathroom. And I LOVE ALL Ginny Di videos!
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⚔ P ! P ! P ! ⚔
Wait, how much blood is in a horse?
Are you wearing pants
Not all of the way
Did...did...did you just Rick Roll me?
I am both offended, and impressed.
Mental note: Write out affirmations reassuring me that there will be no survivors.
1:26 the third note really cracked me up 😂
TPK, TPK, TPK...
She even wrote a christmas carol about it!
I believe she'd do it. No Scrolls of True Resurrection lying around, forgotten since 3.5, bit still usable.
Yes! You are wearing pants! No need to glance down at all!
Eat your heart out André the Giant!! (Fezzik)
What's actually behind mine: flask of whisky, bottle of Tylenol, crying towel.
A crying towel. That's what's been missing all these years! Thanks!
your liver called - it's begging you to switch to ibuprofen 😅
You guys have a liver still??
@@evanbryant9196 My liver was transplanted from a troll in 1987.
(Still not chaotic evil.)
@@GinnyDi We would not be tasty to famous movie cannibals!
I only use 2 sets of dice so I can have the satisfaction of saying "can I borrow 8d10s real quick?" to my players when they're in a tough encounter
Thats fun 🤭 i Play with 2 Sets and 2 big d20. 1 Set in a Happy color for good intentet rolls ans one in a evil color , that i do Not feeed so it rolls as evil as possible, for enemie rolls ans stuff. And the 2 big d20. One is blue the other Red. These i roll visible for players in Special situations. Like the red one if the hit would down a player or the blue one if the player get something nice.
And that is the ultimate power move
That's mildly evil. I love it.
diabolical. i love it.
I have a dm like that, and honestly, it's great! I love the impact of those moments. I know he has more dice 😂 it just feels really cool to know we're getting into something big
as a beginner DM, I have,
- the basic DM screen from wotc
- the AC and the passive perception of the players
- a list of words to describe attacks so I don't repeat myself too much (which my players told me I was doing after the first two sessions)
- my laptop to search for things I don't remember and stats block of ennemies
- blank pieces of paper to write inportant stuffs or fights
- a set of dies, only one, we're low levels so it's okay for now
- a beer (important) and a small bowl for my part of aperitifs
- a small note with "you can do it" written on it
descriptive word list is such a good idea!
I like the list of descriptive attacks! Is there a source you got them from or did you brainstorm them?
eh thank you !
@@cerrida82 I did it myself, I started with what I knew then I search synonyms and I quickly had 200 words arranged by type of weapons.
Could you explain the list of words to describe attacks?
I love the dice tower in the player side of the screen!
It's such a cool touch!
Came for the behind-the-scenes, stayed for the awesome DM screen.
I really have a dilemma between wanting to roll in front of the players while wanting to hide my notes, I could use that
The dice tower is brilliant! ^_^
@@GinnyDi It reminds me of PDM--always making those combat rolls in front of the players. It's a great policy on so many levels. Also, after 40 years of DMing--a minimalist approach to what is behind your DM screens is what I've found that works best, too. You're already keeping track of so much in one game session and doing a lot of on the fly decision making. The less visual clutter you're dealing with the better.
As for your miniatures and your pile of shame--don't feel bad. I have well over 1000 unpainted miniatures in mine. Just a request, I'd love to see more of your painting in videos. The last one you did was fantastic. You don't have to be Lyla Mev or Sam Lenz or Ninjon or the many other fantastic youtubers out there who are out there. That can be really intimidating for some folks. It's cool to see how it's just fine to have well-painted tabletop ready figs--it doesn't have to be competition level.
i didn't even question the bucket of dice and i think that says more about me than anything else LMAO
One of us. One of us.
100%, that first glance totally checked out in my mind 😆
I personally get my dice straight from the tap every session instead of carrying around a bucket. Much more convenient
she showed us ONE bucket. what she didn't show us, is the 55 gal drum of dice that she filled the bucket from.
I don't have a problem I can stop any time I want
The Sword bit never gets old. Its become something I look forward to in your videos. "How will it get worked into this topic"...I loved the "There will be no survivors" affirmation
I had to put it in at the end to build the suspense this time 😂
Ginny's sword is the Repetition Legitimizes of the DnD world.
Knowing that even DM with such a huge audience replaces monsters with something like Funko-pop makes me feel so calm. Thank you for that info! Missing some expensive stuff often makes people stop their imagination.
Me, I'm behind my DM screen. I find not doing this can cause confusion in the players as to who are the players and who is actually herding the cats.
This is great! :-) lol
😂😂 I can't believe I left that out! Though, to be fair, the only way to get your own Ginny Di is to pick up one of my adventures… it didn’t seem like practical advice! 😅
Herding cats... Priceless. xD
My solution for my minifigures has always been Legos. Players can customize and enjoy it. I can use a variety of creatures and customize things for each session. Any to top it all off, I have a reason to buy all sorts of strange sets just for minifigs and creatures!
I DM for my 10 year-old and his friends, and we use LEGO minifigs. They are customizable and with his assortment we can make up all sorts of variety, and easy enough to snag one to stand in for a generic NPC, monster, summon, etc.
I also use the green baseplates, trees, and some rando things for rocks. There is a LEGO D&D subreddit that has some pretty intense ideas, but I don't go that crazy. I also don't get too pedantic with distances, I'm DMing for kids, but it helps to give the relative distances and locations and that is good enough. Plus it is just fun.
@@hello-timbo I totally forgot about the subreddit. It's been a long time, I need to go back
Hey! I didn't realize anyone else did that! Me and my friends all use Lego for our characters. It's not a perfect solution (particularly for nonhumans), but when we've got two people who know a ridiculous number of minifig parts and 30-ish drawers of loose parts to search through, we make it work.
Plus lego just released a series of dnd minifigs
@@LadyBoldly and dont forget there's a QR code on the blind boxes that tells you whats in them! (because blind boxes can burn in hell alongside digital lootboxes)
At this point we are all going to have to start throwing the "Sword of Ginny D" in our campaigns
Always dropped by one of her characters to start (she's always carrying it, after all) and the stat block could differ based on the needs of the campaign, like finding the perfect video to help you with your next session.
Dang, you know what, I might just do that! XD
the 'Ginny D' intelligent sword...
oh the conversations that could take place... the possibilities are endless!
It's only a matter of time before she upgrades to an Albion Principe--then we really have to look out.
This can be a cursed item, So players will not be able to get rid of it so easily, And when they explain it they'll end up saying: And this is why I'm always carrying a sword!
Best program to track monster HP and imitative is boring old Excel spreadsheets. With a bit of cell function and formatting knowledge you can set up a great system. Bonus is you can prep at work and look like you are doing something really important for the company
High five, paid-to-make-campaign-stuff-at-work buddy! I've got an Excel book with different sheets for every major location my players might go to (with maps and notes), plus more with special encounters. The first sheet is an index with links to the sheets as well as links to websites I might need for quick reference. The office printer is also useful for printing out small battle maps.
was going to say the same thing. i put all creatures into a sheet and they have input box areas where any numbers i enter there, will subtract from their totals. Our character sheets are also excel based.
was just coming here to say this exact thing. i keep the statblocks somewhere else (digital or physical depending on time/monster) but i track hp on an excel sheet that has all the npc's for an encounter. saves me the time and effort of doing math because i can just type the most recent damage into a table and it subtracts from the total. add some automatic coloring to show
Mathing made easy.
Plus you can program Excel to create all sorts of random numbers.
Not me looking at the custom screen site knowing FULL WELL I only play digitally with friends states away...
but like MAYBE just a look.
Awesome video, Ginny! Thanks for letting a newbie DM take a look behind the screen!
Haha, I feel you! 👀 You could just take a peek… you know, for inspiration (and definitely not to fall down the rabbit hole of wanting a full custom setup)
Have you tried Owlbear Rodeo for digital mapping in online games. I run one of my games online, and use Owlbear Rodeo. With free add ons it can track AC and HP, and you can hide these from the players.
Dice, dice tray, laptop, binder with item cards and loot for the session, notepad & pen for initiative and scratch paper, a bundle of plastic tokens for DM inspiration, and a monocle.
Is the monocle prescription or just for *flair* ?
@@GinnyDi**Flair!** I gave each of my players one when they entered the over-the-top posh bullywug court in our campaign.
My game is online theater of the mind style game so my "DM screen" is a Notepad file with the important story beats and encounters, an initiative list with momster HP. Keeping it minimal allows me to focus on the important things and keeps the ADHD at bay.
Spoilers: A horse typically has around 54.5 litres of blood
An equally good answer is: „Usually enough!“
also, the moment this piece of info suddenly matters to you, the horse in questions tends to have a different amount of blood
It’s that half that disturbs me.. like is 55 not a good enough estimate for a horse?
@@JohnR31415 The HORSE demands to have that .5 liter of blood.
Huh. You dont really think about horses having like 11 times as much blood as a person
We used spare dice instead of plastic counters or minis. It was great, because you could say, "The D4s are goblins, the D6s are orks, and the D12 is a troll." and you can set them on different numbers to tell them apart if need be.
Bonus: you can even have the dice show their own initiative count! We did this with d6s for our PCs a while back and it honestly worked great
jup, we did it similarily back in the day. nowadays the players are living several 100km apart and we´re using Foundry :)
I keep everything on my laptop.
Notes, Stats, art, even dice. Nothing is printed except very important magic item's that the players may get during the session.
(Oh, and I keep the DM screen upside down. Because its a Spelljammer screen and there is no "up" and "down" in space when outside of the hill sphere of a planet)
2:40 “I want to be the kind of person that is super organized.” I see you, fellow ADHDer. 👀
I adore the video screen for projection of maps. Just wow. I didn't even think this was possible. Inspired
oh there´s an entire universe of maps created specifically with that in mind and even programs/ vtts are supporting that by now.
Hmm I typically have two full bowls of cereal behind my screen. I'll have to try some of these options!
Have you ever tried to roll your dice in one of them? 😅
Your goblin boss cosplay fills me with immense joy, every time
WOW that DM screen ROCKS! Love the built-in dice roller!
Behind my screen, I've got a beverage (or I'll lose my voice by the end of the session), monster hp on index cards, a summary page of my party's stats, as many dice as I might need to roll in session, and my laptop stand that has space for about 4 books under it. Minis, maps, and props are generally stashed somewhere close by, and my screen has a slot on top I use to track initiative.
I know it’s a small thing but I really appreciate the gnarly coloration around the goblin’s fingernails. Good attention to detail!
Where are all the snacks any DM needs to function?
I have a second, larger table for the snacks and coffee 😂
@@GinnyDi *Cue Brennan's iconic rant*
I pretty much just have some tea and a handful of chocolate chips. XD
The bonus of running games online. Everyone supplies their own snacks.
I bring all of my DM work, for which my player pay with said snacks.
I'm old enough that GM screens were just flimsy cardboard things without any info on them. Then I spent years playing with a GM who was really into theater of the mind, and didn't believe in screens, maps, or minis (and his homebrew system supported that). Since I've been GM'ing myself, I like a screen with some info, and I'm starting to consider commissioning a hand-made one like yours, so thanks for the inspiration!
When I saw you had so few dice for a second I thought you'd gone the Taylor's Tavern Tales route and EATEN THEM ALL
😂 My stomach can't handle that. CON is my dump stat
“And quickly google how mutch blood is in a horse”
I have never related to a statement I have never experienced as mutch as that
how... how much.... ?
According to google, 12.3 gallons.
@@davidparkes7741 Huh, I expected more.
Anyone who's every tried to DM or write a story has weird things in their google history
There is never the miniature you need, 100%! I have a tacklebox full and still always print more. Thanks for the fun video
Scratch paper, bag of dice, phone (smaller than a laptop) and whatever book today's monster is from
1:59 Same! I gave up on digital tools. I just use sticky notes to tab the MM and track hit points at the same time
good idea on that benny hill theme...
i never thought i could use that for my grimdark setting... warhammer 40k... deep inside a derelict space hulk
and yet somehow my players managed to make me use that song and it fitted the situation perfectly...
the capacity of some players to turn anything, anywhere, into a benny hill sketch is amazing
I had a party chasing a group of thieves in Lankhmar and I pulle dup the benny hill chase theme played it LoL
i love your one-shot binder, especially the spell card pages!
i usually have:
- dice tray with a couple sets of dice
- bluetooth speaker
- tablet with buttons for music/ambient sounds/lighting scenes
- printout of my session plan (if i have one lol)
- binder of hand-drawn paper maps (i number them and keep them sorted so i can actually find them)
- laptop with my campaign notes, combat tracking spreadsheet, and books/rules references
- sometimes random cards or printouts for specific crunchy rules, depending on the system (gotta have the pathfinder 1e grappling flowchart lol)
- pencil and index cards
- box of paper minis
I’ve tried so many HP trackers, and a google sheet still works best for me lol
Sometimes the simplest option is the best!
The advert goblin fits so perfectly it feels like they were made for it
Welcome to the in-person digital map club! I use a 65 inch tv built into my game table and use a program called Arkenforge for maps and sound effects. FYI, if your players like bows, get a big screen, they'll love you forever!
This video has impeccable timing. I finally got a small group to DM for and I’ve been trying to find some pointers on what I should look into getting and using.
I usually don't use a screen anymore, because I find it muffles my voice or otherwise kinda gets in the way. But when I'm gaming out on the porch, usually I have a little dice box, a notebook and pen, the minimum number of books to run whatever I'm doing, and a cheap thin hardcover book that's not important to use as a hard surface to put the notebook on. Oh, and printouts of stuff that I never end up needing. I should stop doing that. I used to have a lot more stuff, but I think minimalism makes me less anxious.
I have been looking into making my own DM screen so this is perfect.
Also for minis, I use my bottle cap collection. my players like to choose the ones with dragons that I've found or their favorite sodas
There's a certain set of online _tools_ for _5e_ that is absolutely amazing for running the game even if you don't use it for activities that ought to need an eyepatch and a shoulder parrot. The customizable DM screen module is particularly amazing: the initiative tracker tracks monster HP, conditions, etc..., rolls initiative and HP for the monsters if you want it to, you can set it to show AC and PP too, set up a default party, pre-set encounters, shows the monsters' statblocks when you hover over their names... frankly it's so good it could be sold as a separate product, but it's completely free.
What's the name of this certain app.? Asking for a friend
Just google "5e tools"
@@bargik If you google "tools for 5e" it should show up. If that doesn't work, try "5e tools." You might also consider putting a period between the second set of search terms.
Yeah let us know
@@wowanothercookie 5e tools
i love the idea of having a little laminated sheet and dry erase marker to quickly write initiatives of everyone pinned to the back of the screen. Sometimes remembering stuff like that can add another layer of being overwhelmed so anything I can do to help me focus and also enjoy myself is ideal
I use a clear 8.5x11 sleeve with a printed 0-30 initiative scale HP tracker in it. That clips inside my binder (on the left side) and I write the initiative on that with wet-erase markers; green for my PCs and red for enemies. I prefer the wet erase markers bc they don't rub off and make me lose track of everything, lol.
The real game changer! 5:08
The way I was THIS close to plan out a way to get my hands on a TV for the sake of the map part of the video just because of how cool it sounded,
only to realise (fortunately in time) that I have only ran online D&D as a DM.. ever.
Definitely an idea I will be keeping though
Truly the mark of an experienced DM's space: Notepad, dice, reference material (ie laptop/book).
Never let anyone tell you you aren't doing it right, you've landed where the 20-30 year vets landed.
only one thought - 20+ year vets don't usually bring books. most of everything needed is either in their head or on a few index cards as reference notes.
as a GM of 45+ years, I almost never bring source material or rulebooks to the session.
@@bruced648 next time I'll post a more exhaustive list of "reference material" to suit your specific scenario.
I picked up Scrivener to help with my fiction writing and quickly realised it was also perfect for organising roleplaying campaigns. It was great for creating file structures for organising all the different notes from mission ideas, NPC descriptions and world building notes.
Ginny, did you just rickroll us?
I would deny it but... never gonna tell a lie 😂
@@GinnyDi *SLOW CLAP*
Being rickrolled at an angle of less than 29 degrees does not count as being rickrolled. If it were, just imagine the existential horror of 1980s dance floors!
@@RichWoods23 🤔
@@RichWoods23 Don't have to imagine it - I lived through them. Yes, I'm a fossil.
Thanks for the peek behind the screen!
I am forwarding this to my daughter, a middle school librarian and sponsor of the D&D Club (21 members).
It's a sword, isn't it?
that's why I always carry- awh man!
@@GinnyDi I initially read this as "carry a man" and wondered if you have the arm strength to lift your husband 😆.
@sebastianevangelista4921 every woman should be strong enough to carry her emotional support human, lest she find herself in a Women of Weinsberg situation.
@@matthewkreps3352 Oh good, then we're already prepared. My girlfriend tested out if she could pick me up and could.
In fact it turned out to be actually useful that time she was taking care of me after a minor surgery and I nearly fainted. :P So yeah, it's a useful thing to be able to do!
The last bit about minimizing the amount of gimmicky stuff on my side of the screen seriously hit hard with how I’ve been progressing as well.
7:11 a woman of culture! Great choice of armament!
More and more the Goblin character is giving Ferengi and I'm here for it.
I make A8 notecards for all of the items I give my players, it really helps them keep a smaller table footprint and every characters items can be easily traded with others without having to erase things from their character sheet. I also use physical coins which is an investment for sure but it is a lot of fun to dump a handful of coins and item cards on the table and watch the players figure out how to divide the loot. I no longer need to remind players to deduct gold when buying things and it saves the character sheets from getting the classic eraser holes.
Amazing content, obviously, but I *also* continue to enjoy watching your ad reads which is another level of talent altogether hahaha
Your videos are always so helpful! Thank you fellow Coloradan (:
Thanks, neighbor!!
I'm enjoying your videos. A good perspective and a healthy dose of humor added to the stack.
For live role-playing: DM screen, pad of scratch paper, laptop with notes in OneNote (if you have access to MS Office, OneNote is a great Notebook. Links, expand/minimize note sections, tables, and such). Excel spreadsheet with a simple add/subtract function for tracking damage. Electronic dice (I'm old and got past the dice addiction long ago when the world was young, that and the random function is fine for a game). Source materials on the laptop JIC.
Electronic role playing on Roll 20 base. Just the R20 interface on large monitor and hit point tracking spreadsheet on the other. And adult beverages and hummus as needed.
I think you're doing a fine job of presenting the information in an entertaining manner without too much grand standing. Look forward to more videos.
I'm a clipboard DM. I can run our group's typical 3-4 hour session off of a page that's half notes and half scratch paper, and monsters stats on the page beneath. I usually keep any maps, props, and additional surprises in another room or something. No DM screen needed!
Back when I DID use a screen, I found myself only using it for the status conditions. But if I ever do it again, maybe I'll reconsider!
DM rolls actually should be hidden, because there are times when you may need to fudge the numbers to prevent a TPK.
Just when I think you can't top my favourite video you make another one I love!
Seriously, loved the first reveal! The magic 8 ball and the monster sports drinks were a nice touch. The screen you and your dad made was very cool! Keep up the great work.
You can't beat pen and papers for note taking.
At the end of every session I dictate into MS OneNote no more digging for notes on previous sessions all neatly organized for all 3 of my campaigns.
I can type just fast enough to usually keep up with transcribing conversations verbatim, so long as I'm not involved. Obsidian lets me easily hotlink keywords on the go, or go back and update them. I can't even count the number of times I've been able to search my entire backlog of notes for one very specific detail someone couldn't remember from 15 sessions ago.
Pen and paper never had a chance! It does get points for vibes, though. If I was playing in-person and technology wasn't allowed, I'd definitely use a spiral-bound notebook and treasure its weathered pages.
@@robertschriner5143 I put end of session notes on a Orange post it note right on the VTT map
Always incredible content. As a 15 year GM, I always come back for tips, tricks, and reassurances.
The answer: 52 Billion dice. Any more is excessive
99% of DM prep is counting your 52 Billion dice 😂
@@GinnyDi In the word of those two sharks from Finding Nemo.....INTERVENTION!!!!
That is about one complete D&D-style dice set per person on earth.
One can never have too many dice
@@maxschendell7630 I guess you can, a friend of mines wife told him he can not buy any more dice ... So he backed a kickstarter for an adventure, its not his fault they give free dice with it
I’m starting my first campaign in a few weeks and your videos have been so incredibly helpful
Those earrings 😍😍😍
Right?? 🥰 My favorite GenCon score
@@GinnyDi Dispel Dice, right? ;D
Yep! They're linked in the description 🥰
Our DM has a custom table with a large tv hooked up to his laptop for map projection. It also has lights he turns colors for the mood and built in speakers. Its pretty awesome.
Okay, i have a friend given DM screen, and behind it:
- whatever drink is on todays menu
- a bowl of whatever snacks people brought
- a plain notebook with a proper pen of the day
- at least two sets of dice, but could be more
- a tablet with the info of the characters, campaign, encounters, etc. with the screen split in half and on the other side of the screen i manage the music that sounds from the little but powerful speaker placed in front of the screen
- my phone, to ask some cheeky questions to players during the session
I am SO in love with that integrated dice tower! I thought it just had two chutes, but no! Had to go that extra mile with a friggin' switch!
Your bright personality and cheerfulness is getting me more and more into D&D. Do you run stream sessions anywhere? Would like to see you in action with a group
Watching these videos has me so excited to try and DM an actual in-person session. I’ve only ever been able to play online!
Love your setup. Mine is a sketchbook with my notes and hand drawn (badly) maps, dry erase pens plus pencils, and blank index cards for a variety of things like status conditions, clues the players discover, monster toughness and parry scores for Deadlands that the players can reference,mini maps made up as needed, plus other uses…
My handiest tools are those blank index cards now that I’ve thought about it.
Great video! The sword bit gets me every time. I hope you do that forever.
I'm so relieved to hear that you're not a phony dice goblin pretending to be obsessed over shiny math rocks. Also, if you ever want to do more "let me show you some more of my dice collection" videos, I will enjoy them unironically. Also, my Deck of Boons and Banes is supposed to arrive Friday, so yay! #GetGinnyToTheFeaturedTableAtB&N
Yay, the return of Mite! Good to see her getting a head... or three. Loved the look behind the screen, I've been working on my note taking so always good to see useful ideas.
2:56 I appreciate that you are finding the right blend of technology that serves your needs, rather than forcing yourself to use the shiniest tech no matter what. Bravo.
Seeing the easy build of that digital table gave me an idea.
A plexiglass on top you can use markers to draw on and wipe off would be useful for certain area's with affects or even for the players to use for strategy planning and for a public note for all to read and/or add important information for the party.
Thank you very much, very comprehensible and amazingly well organized. I have a strong tendency towards paper, which is why I often write everything down (in widely varying degrees of detail). The downside is that my basement is overflowing with folders full of scribbled notes from my games as a GM and as a player in perfect, albeit chaotic, harmony. And that's despite the fact that I digitize a lot of things afterwards, but I still have space and I don't have a problem for that long. I'm right about that!
When it comes to music, I prefer soundtracks for campaigns, as these are perfect for providing background and character music if you avoid familiar themes (The easiest way to lay wreckage to your storytelling is to play the „Raiders March“ and watch your players react.)
And I prefer paper rulebooks because I tend to get lost in PDFs.
The cat is usually behind our DM screen sitting in the DM's dice tray regardless of how he feels about it.
Very interesting, as always I love your skits and your thoughts on storytelling and creativity (and working with others)
I absolutely love how easily you've justified your sword as a business expense. Great video! I really relate about having a laptop but generally using pen and paper where possible. I tend to print out all the statblocks and draw a little rectangle next to them to mark hitpoints, like an 'encounter sheet' instead of a character sheet. It takes a tiny bit more prep to print it, but it absolutely speeds things up for me at the table compared to typing the number changes. That said, modifying hitpoints constantly makes me yearn for a system that doesn't use it, but nearly every tactical system does involve hitting the bad guys... well, at least it's enjoyably analog!
I started being VERY detailed about each session, trying to prep as much material as possible and keeping it all behind the screen for “easy” reference
After almost two years I’ve digievolved into the kind of the dm who either hyper fixates on a single npc and builds them as an actual character, keeping everything up to date and building entire cities because of them, or I improve literally the whole session and have my players keep note of every random name I have to come up with
So far so good, the perfect balance is a whistle away from making me fall in the depths of absolute chaos
Ah, good. I bought signal whistles with my adventuring gear, one for each party member. Now we can bluff the tin whistles if we have to. TOOT TOOT, Zhents!
Something I can't live without is a little table I made and printed out that tells me what skills each player has trained, that way I have the ability to quickly tailor check types and DCs to the characters in the moment.
Thank you for the video, I always love all your stuff! As a new DM who is trying super hard to be organized when I am not an organized person, it's so interesting to see what you as a veteran DM have behind your screen!
For combat tracking, I've found improved initiative to be perfect for me. I do a lot of homebrew monsters and it not only covers initiative order, abilities, spells and conditions etc but also allows me to create the monsters right in their very intuitive software without having to use other stat block creators.
Thank you, I appreciate thevpeek behind the curtanin. It was surprisingly normal. I was not expecting scandalous, just more higher end stuff. Everything is attainable/ you can make what you have work. I am planing out my first campaign. Watching this video, definitly took some pressure off.
Ginny I dont Know why but your Goblin voice is so damn good I absolutely love it
I can't live without initiative trackers that hang on my DM screen now. So much help for me and my players.
The goblin make-up is brilliant! :D
I just got an iPad with the Apple Pencil and I think that encompasses a lot of what I need, PDFs, writing stuff, my notes, everything.
Having a sword on hand is good. Having a casting g of fireball whe. The whole table argues with the ruling is priceless. For everything else- there are the daggers.
Great video Ginny. You've embraced a lot more tech than I have. :-D
My DM Screen is still an old school foldable cardboard with the combat rules. Behind my screen:
-- two bags of dice (each about the size of a Crown Royal bag)
-- pen and paper for quick notes
-- combat stat sheet for tracking monster and character HP
-- music player connected to bluetooth speakers
-- my laptop handy for my extensive world and campaign notes
-- a notebook with maps, special magic items, custom monsters, and NPC data and sketches
-- the core rulebooks
I used to run session with a dice cup and dice tray because I don't quite trust myself with rolling dice just with my hand. It worked, but it left me with limited space, considering I have either the campaign module behind my screen, any notes that I need and my phone for tracking initiative and time.
I finally got a really nice folding dice tower at a convention and it feels just as good as my dice-tray combo and leaves more room than before.
Fun video! Gonna do as prompted at the end and describe my setup. I ended up getting one of those cloth dice bags with 9 compartments. Seven of them hold 40ish of each normal D&D die size and the other two hold 4 or 5 of each of the 7 additional DCC funky die sizes. My dice tray is a faux leather 11" hexagonal design, camel color, and I keep a yellow lined 4x6" sticky note pad for mostly inititative and HP tracking. I like the colored status rings with the condition written on them, so one box of those. A shoebox full of minis is usually on a nearby chair, rulebooks and monster cards/spell cards in another. No adventure books, but a smaller bag of random generation dice and some cards, like the Oracle Story Deck, combine with my psychotic mind to randomly create every aspect of my games. I actually don't use a screen but let everyone see my rolls if they want... I enjoy their reactions to them LOL.
I wasn't sure about you and your channel...but...a single Benny Hill reference has solidifid all that. ❤🎉
I think the most fun I had DMing was the Edge of the Empire game. In almost two years of monthly games, I never had to open the rulebook, the dice did all the talking. Everything was rolled openly, so I didn't have to have space behind the screen for much secret rolling. I had some NPC cards, note paper for hit points, a set of Rory's Story Cubes for winging it (which was most of the time), a 3x5 card with session notes, another with NPC names, and one set of percentile dice for winging NPC reactions. Super lean and mean.
Back to D&D and I'm kind of panicking because of all the stuff I'm worried I'll need, but your video put me at ease, so thanks! 😊
Love the vid! I'd be interested in seeing one about what your session prep looks like (across the spectrum). I spend multiple hours each week preparing for my sessions (fully homebrewed campaign), and while I don't want to reduce the amount of work I put into the sessions, I would enjoy reducing the amount of time I put into them, its exhausting!
Like you, Ive got a hybrid setup: Laptop (for spells, rules, map, adventure), dice bag, a neat custom rolling tray (rolling dice, storing minis), tiny flip notebook (HP/initiative tracking), + an emotional support owlbear.
Thanks for the video! I use folded index cards with numbers for initiative tracking that the players set in front of them facing me with the bad guys in order on my DM screen. I also use a small dry erase board for tracking bad guy HP, legendary actions, ect. A fellow DM I play with has also adopted the dry erase board and they love it as well.
Great video!
I used to use pencil and paper for HP as well, but these days I find a spreadsheet works best for me. I have a template saved with each party member and their AC in their own row. When I want to prepare for a combat, I just fill out rows for monsters with AC, HP, Attacks and any other abilities so it's all there for me to reference at once. When it's time to roll initiative I just fill in those values and I can sort by that column. Easy peasy.
I've not been a DM for long, but I have been an online player for years. The more I experiment, the more I realize a good D&D tool needs:
- to be minimal and intuitive, so you don't have to think about how it works during the game
- to be flexible and hackable, so the tool adapts to your game and not the other way around
- to mostly offer features that speed up the game and compensate your own weaknesses
With that said, I present you my three favorite tools:
- Raw text files and a good search utility
- Spreadsheets to track monster stats and HP
- Owlbear Rodeo :)
I use my GM screen for the occasional chart or table. But mostly I use the folded screen to cover my clipboard/notes when I go to the bathroom. And I LOVE ALL Ginny Di videos!
Thank you so much. I am new, in being DM, and now I know, what is interesting (or what shoud I) to put on the screen. Again, thank you :)