So I'm currently listening to a D&D podcast's first episode, and I'm listening to the DM go on for...a loooong time, setting up the basics of his world for the players. The problem I've noticed is that, due to the speed in which he says all of it, and the casual tone, it's easy to just miss things as he moves on to the next "basic detail" So it made me think about making a literal cheatsheet for "shit you should know just for being a person who has lived their whole lives in this world" and just handing it out to the players, to try and minimize player confusion, and the need for exposition.
I'm reminded of a series of novels in the LitRPG genre, that bring this up a lot. The MC's are transported from our world to this one, and it's PAINFULLY obvious that they don't know the everyday life shit to the people around them. They ask questions and the people say "How could you not know about that?" It's a funny bit of comedy for the novels, but by this point it is a bit tiring, 11 novels in. And it reminded me of a gaming table a lot.
So, have any of you ever adopted this? Just a checklist of details that don't need a Knowledge check, but should be shit your players know, but obviously don't because they don't live in Fantasyville. Shit like "The roads are all magically enhanced by the mage's guild for ease of commerce and travel, but nobody really trusts the mages, so some think the roads are cursed" or "The ruling family of the nation you are in are The Peopletons of Placetown, and they're mostly liked, primarily tolerated. They have been an inoffensive ruling family for several generations, but the current crown prince, is something of a playboy, and asshole about the kingdom." Just so they have something to reference when you do name dropping, to prevent the blank expression as they try and remember who that person was, and in what context.
Any of you done this? How did it go?
I'm reminded of a series of novels in the LitRPG genre, that bring this up a lot. The MC's are transported from our world to this one, and it's PAINFULLY obvious that they don't know the everyday life shit to the people around them. They ask questions and the people say "How could you not know about that?" It's a funny bit of comedy for the novels, but by this point it is a bit tiring, 11 novels in. And it reminded me of a gaming table a lot.
So, have any of you ever adopted this? Just a checklist of details that don't need a Knowledge check, but should be shit your players know, but obviously don't because they don't live in Fantasyville. Shit like "The roads are all magically enhanced by the mage's guild for ease of commerce and travel, but nobody really trusts the mages, so some think the roads are cursed" or "The ruling family of the nation you are in are The Peopletons of Placetown, and they're mostly liked, primarily tolerated. They have been an inoffensive ruling family for several generations, but the current crown prince, is something of a playboy, and asshole about the kingdom." Just so they have something to reference when you do name dropping, to prevent the blank expression as they try and remember who that person was, and in what context.
Any of you done this? How did it go?