overgeeked
Open-World Sandbox
Too bad. But good for you for doing that. Sounds like a fun job.A couple years ago I took a job teaching 12 years olds how to play D&D over the course of a couple sessions. By the end of the second session, one solid GM had emerged from the group of 6 kids.
A year later they weren't playing D&D anymore because it was "too much work" compared to just playing video games together. I did not follow up beyond that but my guess is it was the GM kid's opinion on the matter that resulted in them dropping tabletop, since the work involved isn't high for players and these kids were already tech savvy enough to play online.
The two glaringly obvious things to look at are the rules themselves and the expectations of players.Running 5E is realwork,especially for new GMs. It needs to be less work. It was less work in 1985. Find out why and fix it.
In AD&D, the entire character creation, ability scores, races, classes, alignment, languages, weapons, armor, etc sections took 30 1/2 pages. In 5E, that same info takes 160 pages. More than five times the rules to read.
In AD&D, the rules for magic and all the spells in the PHB take 60 pages. In 5E, the rules for magic and all the spells take 90 pages. Exactly one-and-a-half times the rules to read.
If you want to talk about B/X it's even worse. Basic was 64 pages in total. Expert was 64 pages in total. So B/X in total was 128 pages long...about the same length as the AD&D PHB...and the 5E PHB is two-and-a-half times as long.
In short, too many rules, too many options, too much stuff to read through before you can actually play.
As for the players' expectations, I've already touched on that before and was yelled at for it so I'm not interested in doing that again. It's still true. The article is still spot on and so is Ben's video. The player expectations are beyond what most mere mortals are capable of. Most referees are not professional storytellers. Players expecting them to be is unfair. Referees expecting themselves to be professional storytellers is unfair. And yet...here we are.