Paizo Top Nav Branding
Welcome, guest! | Sign In | My Account | My Subscriptions | My Downloads | My Wishlists | Shopping Cart   Shopping Cart | Help/FAQ
About Paizo   Messageboards   News   Paizo Blog   Help/FAQ  
Search
Links
Shop
   RSS New Blog Entries Facebook Twitter Email


Ask a Pro: Question Four

Monday, June 8, 2009

4. You have been playing a campaign for many months, and your group suffers a TPK. Do you fudge the rolls, contrive a reason for them to be brought back, have them create new characters and pick up where the others left off, or just scrap the campaign?

Lisa Stevens: I've never had a TPK; it's been close! (laughs) I'm a big believer in creating and building a campaign over time. I've had key NPCs die and had to completely reinvent the story, but I don't think I'd ever allow the PCs to get to the point where they are faced with a TPK. It would ruin the story, and it would ruin my fun as the GM. I mean, it would be like watching a season of CSI and halfway through they replaced all of the characters and actors and never resolved any of the plot threads.

F. Wesley Schneider: Yes, I usually try to save them. I mean, if it's just one or two characters that die, then that's fine, you can pick up your new character at the next town or dungeon. But if it's the entire group, then yeah, I usually contrive some way for them to keep going. I mean, I've fudged dice, I've had them maybe captured instead of killed, and so on.

James Jacobs: Every time I've had a TPK, that's been the end of the campaign. Start over.

Erik Mona: Depends. If... Well, it just depends.

Jason Bulmahn: Sometimes I'll fudge but I try to gauge the group and see if they're interested in continuing. Sometimes I'll start a new group and tackle the same storyline from a different perspective. Like for example let's say they're all soldiers under a warlord and they all decide that he's evil and turn against him but are all TPKed, well the next batch of characters they make might be a bunch of villagers whose village was destroyed by the same warlord.

Sean K Reynolds: What I would probably do is have everyone create secondary characters where it is their sole purpose to rescue the other group. That way the players are still responsible for saving themselves.

Joshua J. Frost: If everyone dies, it's over. A chance to start something new.

James Sutter: If it's my fault, I'm not against saying, "My bad," and resetting the encounter. But in general, this doesn't happen. I do believe that character death is one of the most important parts of the game. Even as a player, having a character die in a very dramatic way adds so much to the experience. In fact, I've had campaigns where one of my PCs would get killed, then create a new character, and for the next several sessions the plot would revolve around their quest for revenge.

Chris Self: I'll actually roll back the last combat and let them retry. I'm the type of GM who pulls punches if necessary. I see roleplaying games as more of a cooperative storytelling, and TPKs are just no fun.

I've never had a TPK in any game I've ran, more's the pity, but I think I would probably figure out a way to continue the campaign if my players were really, really keen on continuing.

Hank Woon
Editorial Intern

More Paizo Blog. Link. List this entry. Tags: Ask a Pro, Game Mastering, Interviews
Sign in to start a discussion.
Facebook Twitter Email
Messageboards

Goblinworks Blog: LFG! (Looking for Group!), by Kryzbyn

Round 3 Exit Poll - Create a CR 7 Golarion monster, by Phloid

A new job opening at Paizo!, by Kryzbyn

Summoner and metamagic, by Wiggz

Can a Barbarian use Combat Expertise while raging?, by ShadowcatX

Run as Written vs. GM Caveat...Are we being hypocritical?, by WalterGM

Can you cast a spell slowly?, by Benchak the Nightstalker

Disqualification, by Sean K Reynolds

Cancer from the Void, by Sean K Reynolds

Alignment of a Sociopath, by Axl

Online Campaigns

Gobs Rise of the Runelords, Discussion, by Goblins Eighty-Five

Legion of Super-Heroes: One to Live another to Die!, by Cosmos Master

DaWay's Ruby Phoenix Tournament, by Kerumi

The Seer's Journey - DM Downrightamazed, by Jorzan

Goblins 2: The Wreckin'-ing!, by GM Goblin King

Seeking 4-6 players for Carrion Crown PbP, by Eben TheQuiet

DM Aron Marczylo's Curse of the Crimson Throne - Part 3 OOC, by DM Aron Marczylo

The Heart of Hellholme, by Bloody_KissesGM

Sean's Master of the Fallen Fortress, by Beckett of the Bleeding Rose

Hunger and Darkness - Reclaiming Tar-Urkatha, by Ernst "Love" Lowfield

Paizo Blog

The Perfumer's Apprentice—Chapter Four: The Scent of Honeysuckle,

RPG Superstar: Round 3!,

Revenge of the FAQ Attack!,

PaizoCon Pathfinder Society Review,

Pathfinder Battles Preview: Large and In Charge,

Open Game License

Store Blog

Pulling Down the Walls of Jericho!,

Yo-Ho-Ho, and a Bottle of Rum!,

Katana Duel at Dawn—For the Throne!,

I Got 15 Problems, But a Magic Weapon Ain't One!,

Fezzes—and Bow Ties—Are Cool!,

Sign up for our weekly store newsletter

News

Top 16 Advance to Round 3 of RPG Superstar™,

Paizo Announces RPG Superstar™ 2012 Top 32,

Pathfinder Tales Hits #3 on Barnes & Noble Best Fantasy of 2011 List,

Pathfinder Roleplaying Game Now a Dynamite Comic Book!,

Paizo Launches RPG Superstar 2012,



©2002–2012 Paizo Publishing, LLC®. Need help? Email customer.service@paizo.com or call 425-250-0800 Monday–Friday, 10 AM–5 PM Pacific Time. View our privacy policy. Paizo Publishing, LLC, the Paizo golem logo, GameMastery, Pathfinder, Planet Stories, and Undefeated are registered trademarks of Paizo Publishing, LLC, and Pathfinder Roleplaying Game, Pathfinder Campaign Setting, Pathfinder Adventure PathPathfinder Player Companion, Pathfinder Modules, Pathfinder Tales, Pathfinder Society, Pathfinder Battles, PaizoCon, RPG Superstar, The Golem's Got It, Titanic Games, the Titanic logo, and the Planet Stories planet logo are trademarks of Paizo Publishing, LLC. Dungeons & Dragons, Dragon, Dungeon, and Polyhedron are registered trademarks of Wizards of the Coast, Inc., a subsidiary of Hasbro, Inc., and have been used by Paizo Publishing under license. Most product names are trademarks owned or used under license by the companies that publish those products; use of such names without mention of trademark status should not be construed as a challenge to such status.