Editing User:Bill/Thunderspire Mountain Enhanced

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The players who have been able to attend more than one session are beginning to better understand their characters' abilities. Had I chosen to use few enemies they would have probably mopped them up with some haste. The overall tone of this encounter, which lasted almost three hours, was better than the first one in my opinion. Cleitemnestra, Rook, and Sarsariel were all bloodied at one point or another. While I don't really want to kill player characters in every encounter, I want the threat of death to be present and real for the players. It will inform their actions and change the course of an otherwise simple encounter. One of my greatest complaints about RPGs is that the frontal assault so often becomes the preferred strategy when a less bloody option would work. Establishing a potential consequence of death effectively counters that impulse and results in highly creative play, in my experience.
 
The players who have been able to attend more than one session are beginning to better understand their characters' abilities. Had I chosen to use few enemies they would have probably mopped them up with some haste. The overall tone of this encounter, which lasted almost three hours, was better than the first one in my opinion. Cleitemnestra, Rook, and Sarsariel were all bloodied at one point or another. While I don't really want to kill player characters in every encounter, I want the threat of death to be present and real for the players. It will inform their actions and change the course of an otherwise simple encounter. One of my greatest complaints about RPGs is that the frontal assault so often becomes the preferred strategy when a less bloody option would work. Establishing a potential consequence of death effectively counters that impulse and results in highly creative play, in my experience.
  
Rachel, who has played D&D only once or twice prior to this game, is having difficulty communicating the strategy that she wishes to employ to the rest of the group and she is reluctant to just cut loose with her characters' abilities out of fear for harming the other player characters. Once this issue is resolved combat will begin to speed up considerably as Seleme possesses a number of area attacks. The remainder of the group has similar communication issues, but are able to function effectively independent of the group because their abilities only target one or two enemies.
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Rachel, who has played D&D only once or twice prior to this game, is having difficulty communicating the strategy that she wishes to employ to the rest of the group and she is reluctant to just cut lose with her characters' abilities out of fear for harming the other player characters. Once this issue is resolved combat will begin to speed up considerably as Seleme possesses a number of area attacks. The remainder of the group has similar communication issues, but are able to function effectively independent of the group because their abilities only target one or two enemies.
  
 
I'm not sure how to effectively foster tactical collaboration among the players other than by offering them the opportunity to play on a regular basis. Perhaps I can review the available abilities, establish some effective synergies and construct puzzles that can only be solved by performing the correct coordinated action. It smacks a little of pixel-bitching to me, but it could be fun.
 
I'm not sure how to effectively foster tactical collaboration among the players other than by offering them the opportunity to play on a regular basis. Perhaps I can review the available abilities, establish some effective synergies and construct puzzles that can only be solved by performing the correct coordinated action. It smacks a little of pixel-bitching to me, but it could be fun.

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