That depends: do you bring torches?If going into a location with potentially hostile enemies qualifies as a dungeon crawl, does that mean I do dungeon crawls when I visit my in-laws?![]()
That depends: do you bring torches?If going into a location with potentially hostile enemies qualifies as a dungeon crawl, does that mean I do dungeon crawls when I visit my in-laws?![]()
That's an interesting idea. A linear dungeon, such as one that consists of five rooms in a row, will probably lead to a linear adventure. A non-linear structure, such as a mega-dungeon, will lead to a non-linear adventure. We don't know if the PCs will spend all their time on level 1 dealing with giant centipedes and kobolds, or fall down a chute to level 4 and get killed by werewolves.a dungeon is any place where the structure of the adventure coincides with a physical structure.
Man, I'm not going to touch that with a 10 foot pole.If going into a location with potentially hostile enemies qualifies as a dungeon crawl, does that mean I do dungeon crawls when I visit my in-laws?![]()
That depends: do you bring torches?
I think this question underscores one important aspect of what makes something a "dungeon" -- it has to be an unfriendly contained* location, where the PCs aren't just exploring but also under threat. A city isn't a megadungeon normally, but Goblintown might be.2) A city map containing marked points of interest would, like the mega-dungeon, lead to a non-linear adventure. But we wouldn't normally call that a dungeon, even though the physical structure (non-linear) does coincide with the adventure structure.
Yes. Simply Yes. And I hope you make it out alive... we would miss you here otherwise.If going into a location with potentially hostile enemies qualifies as a dungeon crawl, does that mean I do dungeon crawls when I visit my in-laws?![]()
Good thing I defined the term in the OP, huh?I realize that nobody reads the DMG, particularly experienced DMs of which there are many on enworld, but dungeons are defined in the DMG, page 99, and fleshed out on subsequent pages. Adventure types - location-based vs. event-based - are defined on pages 72 and 75, respectively. If you really need a definition before you can decide how to answer a poll, there you go.