Friday, May 8, 2009

When the DM isn't having any fun

The obvious next step is to change -- when you're the DM and you don't like the way the game is going, you set the stage differently. You can't control the actors but you can certainly push them in directions you want to go.

Making a sharp, left turn is disruptive to the flow that the game has taken on. My characters have been wandering around a very well-developed setting, finding all sorts of side events and adventures to occupy them. There's nothing wrong with this but its becoming one long series of distractions away from what I originally planned and was excited about. I had a basic direction and a creative arc for the game that's not happening.

The initial drive was to get them to the "great hope of civilization" and put them under the employ of my central character. Now, I'm finding all these side adventures kind of tediously slow and I just want to get them somewhere that we can have more coheasive games. I'm having to stay extremely flexible and I'm pulling out all my creative powers. That's fine for one or two games where your characters go somewhere you didn't expect and you've got to pull shit out of thin air but how did it get here?

Possible reasons:
  • Too easy Somewhere along the way I've neutered the major antagonist by making her minions a bunch of ponces.
  • Too clear I gave away too much true information and its completely killed the mystery. Misinformation makes it harder for me to keep track of but it also creates a puzzle the characters must actively try to solve.
  • Easy and getting easier My characters are rapidly going up in level and I still don't feel prepared to handle or play out high level adventures or challenges. My characters in effect are running rough shod over my plans. Just dynamically rebuilding enemies in a game to be more powerful than the characters feels a little wrong.
Thoughts and ideas are of course welcome if anyone's reading this.

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