Dungeons and Dragons Stuff

As you all may know by now, I love playing Dungeons and Dragons with my friends and family. Even my wife plays with me every week (can you guess which characters are hers?). In fact, most of my recent works are resulted from playing tabletop games and writing down the notes to turn into a full fledged story later on.

In this section, I want to share with my fellow DMs or anyone who is interested in the game side of the stories. I will break this down into various segments, as it is a significant amount of information (but its so worth it for the content).

Enjoy!

–Documents–

Below are the links to the various working documents I have for any and all of the DnD campaigns I have put together. Feel free to peruse them and use any or all of the information inside. The documents are “read only”, but you should be able to either copy and paste or download your own version to edit and change things to fit your game.

Each document will also have the storyline I ran for my characters, as well as a litany of notes related to them specifically. Feel free to ignore all of that unless you are just interested in what I out down, or you can use those questlines for your own players. It really is up to you.

Included in each document will be storylines, NPCs, magic items, location information, gods and devils, faction information, as well as a main storyline.

If you ever have any questions regarding anything about DnD or my campaign information, please let me know and I will get back to you as quickly as I can!

The Destruction of the Shroud (unreleased)

Zealous Clan One Shot (unreleased)

The Battle of Fates (unreleased)

–Maps–

The maps I have for all of my campaigns are located on a website called Inkarnate. It’s where I made nearly all of my maps, and found all the ones that are left. I love this website, and I will continue to use it to create my worlds until I can’t anymore. 

However, the arrangement on the maps leaves room to be desired. I have them all organized in folders on my end of the profile, but once they’re displayed on my  profile, they lose that organization. So you may have to scroll through to find the specific m ap you need. On the positive side, almost all of the maps are named after the locations, so finding them in the spread should be pretty easy. I will find a way to organize them soon, but for now, this is what I have.