I do that as well, but with one exception. Scouting. For some reason my players are all content with letting the party scout, whoever that is, get 80% of the play time when they are in dungeons, and if they're happy with it, I'm happy with it.I try to make sure and give as equal time to all groups when split. It's no fun to sit back for half a session while half the group is playing. Either each split unit will engage in something interesting, or they will dead end quickly drawing everyone back together.
I have an average of 1 PC death per campaign and my campaigns last about a year. Two of the last three PC deaths were due to a party member going off alone(party split) and encountering something that would be a challenge for the entire group.Kill them. Kill them all. Never split the party.![]()
Agreed.Splitting the party is usually a player based decision, so I don't worry too much about splitting play time between them. I do try to got back and forth after each scene, just in case the party decides to regroup.
I'll never do this, for numerous reasons:With scouting I describe everything to everyone, so that the entire party is engaged, even if they're not technically active.
If you don't want to lose that 10-30 min of game time then don't split the party.Oh, man i've done the separate rooms thing and its just not worth the effort. We came to game together, not sit on phones and smoke cigs or whatever folks do when the game doesn't need them. I understand that players can decide to split the party but as GM I have control over how that time split is handled. I wouldn't want a GM to kick me out of a room for 10, 20, 30 min of a session just to keep up some sense of metagame protection going.
Even a small group can split a party - I've had situations with two players where one got punted for a while while the other did an away mission.VTT on the other hand does have some nice private chat functions that can facilitate some of this, but at the same time I find the GM only has so much attention to give a game table. I want engagement from start to finish for all involved. Also, its why I prefer smaller groups of 4-5 max these days.