D&D 5E Down to six pages of prep work

So...interestingly enough my players started tracking initiative in an extremely low-tech way, but I must admit that it was effective.

We typically use a medium-sized double-sided battle mat (made by Crystal Caste I believe) and just wrote it down on an unused section of the mat for each encounter. I basically let them run with it since they were willing to track for me, but I am still looking for ways to streamline my preparation for each session.

Any more ideas?

That is how I track monster hit points! we just write the total damage next to the mini. Of course when monsters move around a lot it can be less than optimal, but usually it does the trick. After a big battle, the battle mat looks like a math explosion hehe.
 

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For a typical 4-hour session I'll write a half-page worth of written notes, taking about an hour to dream up some story, names, encounter ideas, etc. Anything unused is shoved in a binder for future sessions.
 

I think the core thing is... those of us who "prep with little pages", only prep by "roughing out" stuff, leaving the actual details to happen naturally, during play. For an example of a nigh-perfect example of this, check out Dyson Logos's Dyson's Delve adventure PDF (free). It's a pure dungeon crawl of 11 dungeon levels (https://rpgcharacters.wordpress.com/maps/dysons-delve/ ). It's room layout/description is the perfect mix of info and vagaries. I ran a game (using 1e AD&D) just last year or so with this. Campaign lasted about 8 months with this puppy...and they only got down to level 7 or 8 I think! Ton's of fun, lots of RP'ing (nearby town, gathering information, encounters with another NPC adventuring group, a bandit group lead by a witch looking to use the caves as a base of operations, etc...), all with an underlying quest I tossed in; find and retrieve (hopefully alive) a young 8 year old boy named Willem who ventured into the caves to spite his parents. Good times...good times... :)

Yeah, I'm running Dyson's Delve currently (PCs have got to level 3 so far), it's pretty much the
perfect design in terms of detail, just enough to riff off of, and has been a pleasure to run. Treasure is a wee bit too generous maybe. :)
 

Have you considered a magnetic whiteboard? I've used one to track initiative and conditions since the early 3e days. I use a handheld-sized one that came with magnetic strips that hold cardboard tags you can write on. So each PC gets a tag, then I have "Enemy 1," "Enemy 2," etc, for foes, as well as colored magnets for conditions. I let one of the players do the tracking (less work for me) and just mark in my notes which baddie is which number. Works great with no up front work.
We use clothespins across the top of the GM's screen. I got a huge pack of wooden clothespins for $1, so I put the names our regulars on some of them, and simply colored a half dozen more for other players. For monsters I have five with different numbers of dots, and use the one with my name on it for the biggest baddie in the encounter.

I do have a big ferrous dry erase board I bought to use for HackMaster 5e since its second-by-second combat can be tricky to keep track of for less math-able players. I'll be doing precisely what you do, but the combatant's magnets will be moving around the Count Up tracker invented by a regular in the Kenzer & Co forums.

A while back I posted about decreasing my DM prep work with the goal of making it one page worth of notes etc. along with 30-1 hour of time.

I'm down to about 2 hours of time and 6 pages of notes so much better than it used to be but I'm still not there.

1 page are maps, 1 page is lists of encounters/monsters along with page numbers etc... for them, 1 page is for treasure with unique treasure described, 2 pages are unique monsters and npc's and the last page is for ideas and alternate adventure ideas or riddles/songs/jokes things about backgrounds etc...

How are you guys doing?
Because it's driving me nuts: the word is et cetera, abbreviated etc. (et is Latin for "and", and cetera means "the rest"). Etymology is one of my hobbies. 8o)

To the question at hand. Most of my games fall into one of two categories: D&D Encounters via module, or sandbox made up as we go along. For the former I read the sections of the module I expect to need that week, but don't bother reading anything other parts of it since I won't remember them anyway thanks to a typical American driver who decided her time was more important than my life.

For both types I prepare a spreadsheet filled with the appropriate monsters so I'll have them as needed without having to look them up. The D&D 5e one started as a spreadsheet that automated the calculation of experience to award each session, but ended up as a proper encounter builder like the one I made for Hackmaster 5e several years ago (you may have to scroll down to see it since my HTML anchors on Wordpress are refusing to work).

In short: those spreadsheets have all of the monsters I might want to use and all the info I need to run them. Creating an encounter is as easy as copypasting the desired monsters elsewhere on the sheet, where OpenOffice rolls their HP and initiatives. That's the only prep I need to do for Encounters.

My HackMaster 5e campaign is also an exercise in cooperative world-building, so I don't even have any setting planning to do since even that gets made up as needed. The PCs just recently left a steam-powered city in the middle of a desert, where they got their airship upgraded to be more than a simple flying sailboat. Shortly before that the "Hungry Earth" episode of Doctor Who had aired, so I the PCs ended up having to deal with an invasion of the Silurians that had been sleeping under the city for millenia. They ultimately made peace with them, so when they return the place will be changed significantly by the culture and technology introduced by its newest (or, from their perspective, oldest) residents.

They specifically wanted a campaign that followed Doctor Who's habit of stumbling into trouble, so I don't need to worry about having some huge evil plot they need to deal with, but I do have vague outlines of several that are happening, and dangle hooks in front of the players from time to time, like the summoner they removed from the sewer under the starting city, and the various flying beasties following their airship from place to place. Should they ever bite on a hook then I'll add some details to that outline, but until then the only prep I do is jotting down the occasional encounter, NPC, or setting idea.

The only exception right now, and probably ever, is my GURPS Warehouse 23/13-inspired campaign, set in the late 19th century. In order to have the game be a plausible but suppressed history of the real world, I do hours upon hours of research for each artifact (so I don't run more than a couple of sessions a year). Memory issues resulting from head trauma make it impossible for me to retain all of that information even after that much study, so the game sometimes stalls while I look up some detail I need. That is one of the reasons I set out to develop my GMing improv skills.

The other reason dates back to the very first campaign I ever ran (GURPS, of course). I spent a couple of weeks coming up with combat and non-combat encounters, puzzles, maps, NPCs, and the like. When game time came my players ignored almost all of my prep and forced me to improvise most of the session instead. That is the main reason I no longer put any significant effort into session prep. On the bright side, they spent a good 15 minutes or more roleplaying a dinner with a major NPC, so I let them continue until it looked like it might peter out, at which point I gave the session a nudge. As a GM I live for those moments.

Summing up, I do prep in one of three ways:
* For modules (which I only use at Encounters since I don't really like them) I have a spreadsheet of the monsters, and re-read the relevant sections of the module right before each session.
* For sandboxes I have the spreadsheet, with the monsters sorted onto tabs according to the locations in which they can be found, and some vague ideas of encounters and evil plots.
* For a campaign I want to blend into real world history I research my butt off and have pages of hyperlinked notes so I can find needed historical details in a flash.

The vast majority of my campaigns use the middle option, as do my wife's. Actually, pretty much every game she runs is a GURPS sandbox she improvs. She also GMs D&D Encounters from time to time, but because she's a backup for when we have so many players that we need a fourth table, she doesn't have the benefit of any kind of prep since she doesn't want to spoil the story for herself. Fortunately for everyone, she's pretty good at running off the cuff.
 

I've stopped doing DM maps on graph or hex paper. They're flowcharts now, with the boxes containing room content notes and the arrows between areas containing any hallway details and such.

As I prepare for an adventure, I photocopy monster stats onto 3 X 5 index cards and keep them in a recipe box, with the ones I know I'll need flipped up so they stick up out of my growing collection. Same with NPCs, for later quick reference.

Bookmarked rulebooks - whether physical books with post-it stickies marking important sections or electronic copies (preferred) with bookmarks and hyperlinks.
 

I'm debating over transitioning to a laptop to organize my game vs the traditional 3-ring binder approach with handwritten notes, maps, etc. I haven't really decided one way or the other which would be more beneficial/space-saving since I don't have .pdf copies of my most commonly accessed documents. I don't really want to cart around both books and computer but I can also see the value in having all my documents in one spot without having to shuffle them around.

Has anyone successfully transitioned to a single device for all the GM's needs?
 

Has anyone successfully transitioned to a single device for all the GM's needs?

I've GMed using a laptop for over 15 years, but I've never used just the laptop. I prefer using actual rulebooks during play, and use the laptop for notes, tracking things, etc.
 

I've GMed using a laptop for over 15 years, but I've never used just the laptop. I prefer using actual rulebooks during play, and use the laptop for notes, tracking things, etc.

I'm looking to try this method using only my laptop and the adventure path marked up with underlined and highlighted portions. I've made up an electronic version of the encounter matrix that I mentioned earlier in this thread (copy/paste makes things so much easier) and have the adventure supplement in .pdf ready for access. I have an old netbook (who remembers those?) that I can dedicate solely to my game since it's small and won't take up much space on the table.

What programs or applications do you use to manage your game?
 

What programs or applications do you use to manage your game?

I don't use it as much as I did, and back in the 3e days, I used dedicated RPG software. But now it's basically Evernote for notes and the pdf. I don;t do a whole lot of prep, as my games are more sandboxy, so I'm not always sure what's going to happen.

Your method looks like it would work fine.
 

If you count actual prep time and work, probably 1 hour per session.

Now contemplating about certain aspects of the game, that's mostly not on paper unless I write notes, such as thinking about how an idea might impact the campaign, well that accounts for many more hours of time but that's usually when I'm doing something else that doesn't require direct thought (mowing, driving, etc.).
 

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