• lurkerlady [she/her]
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    edit-2
    2 years ago

    Is this 5e, or are you based?

    PF2e :comfy-cool:

    How do your games work with that amount of drop-in, drop-out?

    We choose narratives where it makes sense to have random assortments of adventurers. Right now we have an exploration ship that sails from island to island and we have a small description of each session that we post in chat after each session so everyone knows whats going on previously. Still allows for character development and RP stuff.

    We've done basic 'you're in a guild hall with all the other adventurers' or 'you're scouts/special ops in a vast military operation' or 'you are protectors of a frontier city and are building it up' sort of stuff too.

    Seems like it’d be a struggle for the DM to plan stuff and have set-pieces balanced correctly.

    We have a bunch of stuff printed out and we use AI generated maps for almost everything. So AI generates a map on top of a flat monitor and throw our 3d printed minis and structures on top of it. If someone plays with us and are reliable they get bribed with free minis for characters, bonus points if they bring food.

    • Eris235 [undecided]
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      edit-2
      2 years ago

      Sounds cool! And I've been a PF2e enjoyer the past year too :party-parrot: Tight math of PF2e probably offsets some the difficulty of balancing encounters. Seems like more personalized stories are a small price to pay for regular game night.

      I've been running two premade modules for 2e over the last year or so, and we've probably average a game every other week for each of them over that time, which is better than a lot of groups I've been in. Haven't really been a module DM in the past, but TBH I really like Paizo's work, and its pretty easy to still personalize and modify to fit the players more tightly, while still being less of a workload on me. Run on FoundryVTT currently; still hermit mode due to Covid unfortunately. Foundry is super quick and easy with its automation, but I definitely still miss the coziness of in-person play.

      • lurkerlady [she/her]
        ·
        edit-2
        2 years ago

        If your social credit score is high you're gonna be at the game every weekend anyways so you do get to develop your character a lot. Theres a lot of little things that effect the algorithm, like we keep track of people bringing food, getting new books for the dm, messaging the bot before a session that you can't come, whether or not you joined the group recently, etc. so that it isn't 100% on the DM to host and do everything. Makes it quantitatively fair without having to fret about stupid stuff.