Mar 14, 2018 2:16 pm
@Naatkinson mentioned this in a recruitment thread in the Tavern, I figured I'd bring that conversation over here, especially in light of the "Mentoring Project" Jabes had brought up.
I'm currently running Tales from the Yawning Portal as a campaign. Granted, we're only part way into Sunless Citadel, but the idea is to treat it almost as a vignette set in whatever setting you choose (we went with Eberron). The players are adventuring currently based on rumors they picked up in the Yawning Portal tavern. Narratively speaking, when they conclude and head back to the main town, there will be some kind of breadcrumby option that will lead to the next Tale.
In regards to mapping, I found it VERY helpful to use Roll20. I purchased the adventure module there, so it came pre-mapped and tokened and everything else. Now, I just work my way through snipping bits of the map from that as static pictures as they explore different parts of it. Alternatively, players could join Roll20 and have access to the map "real time" if they so chose. It definitely is more on the DM cost side of things (since I had to buy the module there), but the actual set-up effort and maintenance is significantly lower, especially as it has all the creatures with stats and everything already there. I can account for lighting and such (since I'm a subscriber anyway), which makes it a lot easier for me to do descriptions and the like, knowing what people can and can't see.
I'm currently running Tales from the Yawning Portal as a campaign. Granted, we're only part way into Sunless Citadel, but the idea is to treat it almost as a vignette set in whatever setting you choose (we went with Eberron). The players are adventuring currently based on rumors they picked up in the Yawning Portal tavern. Narratively speaking, when they conclude and head back to the main town, there will be some kind of breadcrumby option that will lead to the next Tale.
In regards to mapping, I found it VERY helpful to use Roll20. I purchased the adventure module there, so it came pre-mapped and tokened and everything else. Now, I just work my way through snipping bits of the map from that as static pictures as they explore different parts of it. Alternatively, players could join Roll20 and have access to the map "real time" if they so chose. It definitely is more on the DM cost side of things (since I had to buy the module there), but the actual set-up effort and maintenance is significantly lower, especially as it has all the creatures with stats and everything already there. I can account for lighting and such (since I'm a subscriber anyway), which makes it a lot easier for me to do descriptions and the like, knowing what people can and can't see.
[ +- ] Example map image