D&D
Creating your own campaign setting in tabletop roleplaying
Okay, so you've decided you want to create your own world in your weekly tabletop game.
Tavern Watch Plays Witchlight, Episode 3: The perils of custard-related saving throws
Welcome back to another Feywild adventure as our crew of D&D players continue their adventures through the Witchlight Carnival playing The Wild Beyond the Witchlight with Joe, Matt, Andrew, Anna, with DM Liz.
Join us this this weekend as the Blizzard Watch D&D crew continues to search for mysteries behind the Witchlight Carnival
Come one, come all this weekend's D&D game, streaming this Saturday on Twitch at 2:30PM Central, where we'll be playing our third session of The Wild Beyond the Witchlight, where the party is exploring a mysterious Fey carnival.
Join us this Saturday, January 22, as the new Blizzard Watch D&D campaign starts worldbuilding in its Session Zero
If you missed the weird adventures of our original D&D campaign, you're in luck because we're kicking off a new game with a session zero this weekend, on Saturday, January 22 at 2:30 PM Central on the Blizzard Watch Twitch channel.
Why do you think Blizzard hasn’t gotten back into the TTRPG space?
Back in the late 1990s/early 2000s, Blizzard had several TTRPG products out -- from licensed Diablo properties from Wizards of the Coast themselves to the Warcraft/ World of Warcraft Roleplaying Game.
How Mordenkainen’s Monsters of the Multiverse is revising D&D races
Sure, Mordenkainen's Monsters of the Multiverse is a monster book -- it's right there in the title -- but it also serves as an one-stop collection and update for a host of playable races from previous Dungeons and Dragons sources, and it does a lot more than simply republish them.
DMs don’t need to plan every last detail their D&D campaigns and settings
When you're starting a homebrew D&D campaign — building your own adventure in your own world — it's okay to not have everything planned out in advance.
How to get started with D&D without breaking your wallet
So you want to play Dungeons and Dragons -- or any tabletop RPG, really -- but you, like me, are broke and can't afford all those books, and a ton of dice, and minis, and maps, and even more dice.
You don’t have to kill everything — how to reward players differently in D&D
The first time I realized I could just give players a level whenever I felt it was appropriate for the story, I almost fell over.
What fantasy monster would you most want as a pet?
It's a Beholder, isn't it?



