Showing posts with label kit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kit. Show all posts

November 12, 2024

My Dungeon Master Tool Kit Part 2 - Rocketbook

I'm picking back up my series on my Dungeon Master Kit (part
1 being here: link). (Technically, I'm a Castle Keeper these days, but let's not trifle.)

As much as electronic tools are great, I still like using analog tools as much as I
can. However, I'm not as organized with pen and paper. Notebooks, graph paper, etc... I'd grab whichever paper was closest. My notes would get scattered. This was especially the case when running one-shots that then later got resurrected into something more episodic.

My latest hotness is using a Rocketbook.  I've had the original one for a few years, but never made much use of it (for gaming or otherwise). Once I splurged for the executive-sized Pro (7 inch x 9 inch), that all changed. This size is perfect. I really like that it's a hardcover. It's freaking great. Most importantly - it keeps me organized!


Player names redacted to protect the reproachable

A Rocketbook uses special paper on which you can write, clean, and rewrite. (You need to use particular Pilot Fixion pens.) At the bottom of each page is a "destination" icon. You place an "X" through that icon, and then use the Rocketbook app to scan the page. 

"X" on the bell marks the spot

In the app, you associate each icon with a particular storage destination/folder (Google Drive, Dropbox, iCloud, an email address, etc.). You can get as granular as you'd like (e.g., direct to a particular subfolder in Google Drive).

Rocketbook destinations aplenty

Destinations in the app
Once you're good with the page being stored as you want it, you wipe the paper clean with a damp rag, let it dry, and bang, Bob's your uncle, you can reuse the page.

I have a separate Google Drive destination for my C&C campaign, a Through Sunken Lands episodic "campaign" (i.e., periodic, loosely connected one-shot games), a personal journal (which I really should use more), and one for general gaming notes.

The Pro model lets you swap out different insert Page Packs. For example, you can get one already set up like a planner. There is special D&D Page Pack that I did splurge for (because it was on sale).  It has pre-set pages for campaign notes, PCs, NPCs, random tables that you develop, etc.  I probably would not get it again (well, maybe I would at the sale price), but you really don't need it. Obviously, a lot of the pages are D&D-specific. It's not horrible, but you can also design your own permanent pages for any Rocketbook with a Sharpie. If you're really curious about the D&D Page Pack, there is good review here (and embedded below): link






Here are a few assorted shots of my Rocketbook for good measure.

Dungeon info


PC Info

Uhm... with the cover closed.

Good review of the 
D&D Page Pack




October 21, 2024

My Dungeon Master Tool Kit Part 1 - Dice Box

I have been RPGing for decades. I love it. My big brother taught me how to play AD&D back in the 80s and I haven't stopped. Hiatuses, sure, but never really stopped.

More often than not, I'm Dungeon Mastering, Game Mastering, Castle Keepering, etc. I enjoy figuring out the "perfect" DM tool kit.  Back in the day, it was a quest for the most kick-ass Trapper Keeper, the sweetest dice bag, and the most thorough DM screen.  In the next handful of posts, I'll share my current tools of the trade.

Today, I'll focus on containers for that most treasured gaming commodity - DICE. 

Over the years (like a lot gamers) I have amassed quite a lot of dice. I love 'em. Never quite pleased with a humble dice bag, here is what I use at the moment and what I've used in the past.

Current Dice Repository:  Portable Dice Box of the Gods
  • Love it. 
  • It's not the most charming container, but damn is it functional and versatile.
  • It holds a crap ton of dice.
  • It's secure (I hate losing dice). 
  • It lets me sort them (with rearrangeable sections). 
  • I just need a way to bedazzle it somehow.
  • A wooden version of this would be awesome.


Previous Solutions (in order from most recent)

  • Kind of a weird one, but I used a travel case that came with my Skull Shaver electric shaver.  (Yep - I'm bald as a cue ball). 
  • I slapped a sticker from RedBubble on it to cover up the logo.
  • It was large enough to hold all my dice and very secure, but it was tricky not to spill the dice when opening.


Worked really well.
Nice and secure.
It was nice to have sort of an open bin of dice.
I also liked having the second layer for pens, dice, brass knuckles, etc.

      

Lots of Dice Bags
  • Surprisingly never a Crown Royal bag.
All Hail the Kind of Dice Bags!


    Affiliate Stuff

    Full Disclosure: To support my addiction...er... hobby, any links to a product are more often than not affiliate links to DriveThruRPG, Amazon, or another site.