KOBOLD Guide to Game Design—Volume 1: Adventures (based on
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Open Design
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Practical Advice from Great RPG Designers
Ever wondered what it takes to make it as a freelancer? Want to improve your homebrew adventures?
Wonder no more!
The KOBOLD Guide to Game Design distills years of professional experience into a collection of design wisdom that can improve your game and vastly increase your odds of selling a publisher on your work.
Your Audience and Making the Pitch
Design Tips and Tricks
Writerly Craft
Pacing and Drama
Worldbuilding
Genres from Noir to Arabian and Underdark
City Adventures
...And More!
This 88-page collection of 15 essays—many previously presented only to patrons of OPEN DESIGN—is now available to the public for the first time. It also collects design wisdom from the pages of KOBOLD QUARTERLY magazine.
Authors include Keith Baker, Wolfgang Baur, Ed Greenwood, and Nicolas Logue.
Though short, this is packed full of Intelligence, Wisdom, and Charisma. I have read articles and "how-to" blogs, books, and threads about the very topics this book covers, and none of them reach this level of informative and entertainment quality.
Baur not only explains the information the reader needs to hear, but he does it well and in a way that can be understood.
This book is for a GM who is looking for help on how to write his own material, a new freelance writer who does not have a personal coach, or a seasoned world craftsman looking to perfect their art.
This book is worth more then the purchase cost, and if used to boost freelance writing skills it will more then repay for itself.
This is exactly the sort of "nuts & bolts" resource I've been wishing for as a DM since I first picked up a DMG, and I unreservedly recommend it to anyone who strives to improve their adventures.
I only have one quibble: at least in the .pdf, there are a ton of typos!
This guide is a great book about the design of a RPG adventure that I take a pleasure to read and to grab the knowledge.
Even, some of the advice can work for other things of life than the design of an adventure.
People often say that they know what makes a good adventure, or the sort of things they want to see in one, but few - until this product - have attempted to tease out how to make it all work. Herein is a collection of 15 essays about the adventure design process, what works and what does not, but all with one eye cocked at not just writing good adventures, but also publishable ones.
The Introduction is pretty much an outline of how the first few essays came about and why the authors began to share this kind of material - with many of the essays having developed out of ideas kicked around during the development of Open Design projects.
The first essay looks at The 3 Audiences, and analyses how there are three quite different groups of people to whom your adventure must appeal if you hope to see it in print: the publisher, the gamemaster and the players. It's short, both in length and detail, but thought-provoking nevertheless. The next essay looks at the merits of compact and concise writing, then there's one on how real writers push on past the fun parts of writing to ensure that the piece is as good as they can possibly make it, but also knows when to stop and mail it in ... you are already getting the idea of a collection of essays that will really make you think, whether you are a published author (or want to be one) or are interested in some of the thinking which goes into the role-playing books and magazines that you read.
Will reading this improve your writing? No, you have to do that for yourself. But this work will get you thinking about what you do and that WILL make you a better writer. This can benefit you even if it's not RPG adventures that you write, or want to write. Who knows, I may even write better reviews! There is a whole bunch of fascinating ideas here, which will send me back to read, reread and above all think more about what I'm doing when I write and run games.
Did you like Wolfgang Baur's "Adventure Builder" series on the WotC website? Did you like his (short) run of "Dungeoncraft" articles? Consider these kind of like the graduate-level semester.
These essays were written for a specific audience:
writers interested in freelance design work (for example, essay #2, "Shorter, Faster, Harder, Less" on writing tersely)
GM's willing to spend money, time, and effort to create kick-butt adventures and experiences for their players (for example, Nick Logue's "Stagecraft", on cinematic techniques)
(If you're happy running modules as written, there's not a lot here that will interest you.) Wolfgang culled the best of the Open Design essays for this collection.
My recommendation: get the print version. It's well-assembled and a nice size.
I just finished reading this and it's great. It offers great insight into the minds of the creators and for such a small books covers an array of different topics to help make adventures.
I just bought and read this this morning, and I must say, I found it really handy and insightful to read. It gave me lots of ideas and made me understand why some of my ideas were not so hot.
An excellent buy for anyone interested in the game design industry.