Good to hear it’s not just me. I had the same before every performance when doing amateur stage acting. It just struck me last night how much I enjoyed the session after but before was definitely anticipating calamity. I get what you mean about cons. It definitely has less impact on me when running for face to face home games for people I’ve known for decades. Though it’s still there.I get you on immediate anxiety. Still.happens at cons for me sometimes (not so much "home games").
But does that role need to be with the DM specifically? In our group that's something someone else is better at, so they've got that job for the last 35 years...I was going to say the social referee bit but @Deset Gled covered it. Lil surprised not to see more folks mentioning it.
A lot of us feel spent after a morning/day/night of DMing. One of our group once explained it with extroverts get energy from being around other people and with introverts it costs energy from being around people. Our group and most of my family are introverts, social interaction (playing an RPG) costs us lots of energy, be it as a player or a DM. And as a DM you're also herding multiple cats (aka. players), thus that costs additional energy, hence the exhaustion...I’ll be honest - I feel exhausted after a night of DMing. It’s never gotten better in all my years running games. Like I feel like I get a headache immediately after, and I’m just kind of mentally spent.
Yes, if you are using trad and neotrad styles the GM is gonna be where the buck stops. That is not to say players cant assist and I think part of being a good player is doing so.But does that role need to be with the DM specifically? In our group that's something someone else is better at, so they've got that job for the last 35 years...
I am an extrovert, but I also get spent after a long session. I did a con game for 40 players back in Dec and I was so spent I was telling people to get away from me for an hour or two after the event. I needed some alone time to process. So, its not just introverts that get worn out by this work.A lot of us feel spent after a morning/day/night of DMing. One of our group once explained it with extroverts get energy from being around other people and with introverts it costs energy from being around people. Our group and most of my family are introverts, social interaction (playing an RPG) costs us lots of energy, be it as a player or a DM. And as a DM you're also herding multiple cats (aka. players), thus that costs additional energy, hence the exhaustion...![]()
A lot of us feel spent after a morning/day/night of DMing. One of our group once explained it with extroverts get energy from being around other people and with introverts it costs energy from being around people. Our group and most of my family are introverts, social interaction (playing an RPG) costs us lots of energy, be it as a player or a DM. And as a DM you're also herding multiple cats (aka. players), thus that costs additional energy, hence the exhaustion...![]()
I am an extrovert, but I also get spent after a long session. I did a con game for 40 players back in Dec and I was so spent I was telling people to get away from me for an hour or two after the event. I needed some alone time to process. So, its not just introverts that get worn out by this work.
The older I get more and more I am unwilling to invest in new systems. I have 5ish games I’m comfortable running now. They handle most things. I’d make an exception for something like OSE or Mothership but they aren’t great fits for my group who prefer something more crunchy most of the time.
It particularly comes after major fights. I’m much more of a storytelling GM. Managing initiative, remembering multiple monster abilities, and then remembering to turn that into an engaging “story” as it’s happening is a struggle for me. Like, I can focus on tactics and rules for battles but coming up out of that to then go back into a storytelling kind of perspective around what’s happening is not an easy shift for me. If I’m running an investigative type of game like Call of Cthulhu, I’m in my sweet spot. It’s a much more enjoyable, engaging experience for me versus D&D style combat.