this post was submitted on 16 Nov 2023
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D&D Next - 5e Discussion

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Copying this from a comment I made a few months ago, I'd like to try having an "adventuring week" rather than an "adventuring day", i.e. have X encounters per in-game week(ish) rather than the same number per in-game day. The Gritty Realism variant rules basically provide this though I think the name really puts people off; I'm not trying to add realism, just make it so you can have actual meaningful resource-draining encounters as part of something like a week-long travel (currently I'd need to throw in so many encounters that it becomes tedious, or have one-encounter days which we all know the problems with!)

Has anyone tried Gritty Realism before, and if so how did you implement it and how did you find it? My main question would be:

  • How many days did you have per long rest?
    • I'm thinking probably three (so two short rests per long rest) but that's more a guideline for me the DM when planning rather than mandating a minimum time between long rests.
  • How long were your long rests and did they need to be in a "safe haven"?
    • I think something like at least 24 hours of downtime in a safe-ish place (including two sleeps), though again it's on me the DM to make sure safe havens are common enough.
  • How did you adjust spell times?
    • 1 minute stays as 1 minute, it's meant to last a single combat
    • 1 hour up to several hours, could last multiple combats but doesn't persist after a short rest
    • 8 hours up to several days, lasts most of the adventuring week (e.g. mage armour)
    • 24 hours up to several days, at least as long as the adventuring week
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[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

@smeg What I’ve done with other systems is to try and turn it a bit more narrative….

Each “episode” (hopefully game day) starts with a long rest. Each “scene” starts with a short rest. If your episode covers a week? One long rest. If you deliberately break one challenge into multiple fights? Still one scene, no rests.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

...nice approach; that strikes a transparent compromise between hex / grid pacing for folks who appreciate videogamey dungeon crawls...

...the only concern i have is that it makes rests an overt game of DM-may-i, rather than a tool of player agency, even though careful narrative framing could reduce either approach to identical mechanics...