overgeeked
Open-World Sandbox
The [+] is to keep things positive and prevent the already tired arguments about preferences and this style of module. This thread is for people who like this style of information design and want to talk about it. There are plenty of other threads to hate on things you don’t like.
Branching off of this thread.
Several modules were talked about in the other thread, many OSR modules were mentioned. So it's worth reading some of the posts there for modules to check out.
But, moving ahead to talking about actual module design, what are some ways modules can use information design, layout, presentation, etc to make modules both easier-to-read and easier-to-run at the table?
For me walls of text are a nightmare. I need bullet points and important text bolded. The actual scheme or plot to be explicitly stated somewhere up in the front of the module. Tips, tricks, advice on how the villains will react when the PCs inevitably foil some aspect of the bad guy's plan. Maps, or fragments thereof, to be repeated in the same page or spread as the rooms being described.
Anything and everything that will make the module easier for the referee to actually run at the table while minimizing any prep time required to re-write the module into something useful.
Any ideas?
Branching off of this thread.
Several modules were talked about in the other thread, many OSR modules were mentioned. So it's worth reading some of the posts there for modules to check out.
But, moving ahead to talking about actual module design, what are some ways modules can use information design, layout, presentation, etc to make modules both easier-to-read and easier-to-run at the table?
For me walls of text are a nightmare. I need bullet points and important text bolded. The actual scheme or plot to be explicitly stated somewhere up in the front of the module. Tips, tricks, advice on how the villains will react when the PCs inevitably foil some aspect of the bad guy's plan. Maps, or fragments thereof, to be repeated in the same page or spread as the rooms being described.
Anything and everything that will make the module easier for the referee to actually run at the table while minimizing any prep time required to re-write the module into something useful.
Any ideas?