Demographics and the military in my campaign, Part 2
Last post, I set out to answer a simple question for my D&D campaign: “How many troops can Duke Archanis Reynald field against the Bestials or some other invading army?”…
Last post, I set out to answer a simple question for my D&D campaign: “How many troops can Duke Archanis Reynald field against the Bestials or some other invading army?”…
Today, ladies and gentlemen, we’ll be taking a long strange road to answer a simple question: “How many troops can Duke Archanis Reynald field against the Bestials or some other…
If you’ve never read about Ben Robbin’s “West Marches” sandbox campaign, turn your browser this way and have a read of Parts 1, 2, 3, 4 and Running Your Own.…
It’s been a long desire of mine to mix in any scale of combat into my D&D campaign, whether it be 1 on 1, skirmish level or huge armies level.…
After creating the map for the political “nation” that my D&D tabletop players are located in, and then creating the full continental map, the next priority was creating the “nation”…
Creativity begets creativity and I’m on a roll with my campaign maps. I’ve finally completed the map for the players to use for my D&D campaign. What is nice about…
Back in the old blog, I posted a picture of the “Lands of Men” from my D&D campaign. This continent is flargin huge. This landmass is roughly 220 hexes east/west…
On the first day of Summer, the 58th year after The Doom, the brave Marshall Roehm, his valiant companion Sir Reynald, a large company of knights, cavalry and foot soldiers…
The players in my campaign have discovered a way for Marshall Roehm (the local noble in my campaign) to retake a key strategic position away from the orcs. There is…
So I know I was semi-chastised elsewhere in the blogosphere for wanting to just concentrate on having fun and suspending “realism” in favor for “awesomeing up”… … but when my…