Dungeons And Dragons
The Blizzard Watch D&D group returns to a creepy volcano lair with fresh characters in our latest one-shot adventure
That's right, the Blizzard Watch team once again we braved the virtual tabletop — complete with a 20 minute delay as the DM tried to figure out Roll20 — to play D&D and explore an ancient volcano lair.
We’re going back to D&D with a special one-shot adventure this week
Update: The game is over, but you can catch the replay on Twitch and it will be up on Soundcloud for podcast listeners soon.
How to decide what content to use in your D&D game
We've talked a bit about how to run a D&D game, and we'll likely talk about it again, but since we've featured several Unearthed Arcana supplements and talked about books like the Explorer's Guide to Wildemount, it feels to me like time to discuss a somewhat sensitive topic that every D&D group eventually confronts.
D&D races 101: All your options from the Players’ Handbook, from Halflings to Half-Orcs
If you remember our Dungeons and Dragons Classes 101 roundup, we're using the same format here for our overview of the various races one can play.
Welcome to the town of Last Hope as Blizzard Watch Plays a Weird West D&D adventure
This week our tabletop gaming crew dove back into D&D, but instead of more clone adventures in the Riatan our adventurers found themselves in the town of Last Hope in a Weird West one shot adventure.
Join us on Twitch for our last D&D game of the month: A weird west adventure!
The Blizzard Watch crew usually gets together once a month to play a D&D game that I can only describe as wacky and wonderful.
How to play with pets in D&D
Imagine a grizzled, old Wizard, staring down from a hill.
Why you should run a homebrew D&D campaign, and some tips on how to build your own unique world
There are a lot of excellent Dungeons & Dragons setting books out there that will give you all the details you need to run a game in their setting, and those settings (also known as campaign settings, world settings, campaign worlds and/or simply campaigns) are often excellent.
How to run an evil campaign in D&D (without having your players resort to murder)
Sooner or later, someone always suggests this one.
D&D’s Explorer’s Guide to Wildemount is an excellent teaching tool for new Dungeon Masters
I don't feel like I need to convince you to buy the D&D's Explorer's Guide to Wildemount -- if you're playing D&D, then you probably already know about Critical Role and Matt Mercer's campaign setting for that long-running, streamed D&D series.