How I Write One-Shots
How I Write One-Shots
Animation and voice over project I did about Dungeons and Dragons. Second of it's kind, they're fun to work on, and I get to nerd out about a game I play every week with friends.
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My D&D group likes to take turns DM'ing, and I've become known as the one-shot guy because I usually set up long, complex sessions. Our group has had a lot of fun doing these kinds of one-shots, and I haven't really seen videos about this particular style of one-shot on YouTube, so I decided to make it. Usually the advice is similar to what @Runesmith has talked about; coming up with an idea, having a series of encounters that lead into each other, and running it with whatever characters the players bring. But I like to make more open, longer one-shots, where the players have a buy-in, it's written around them, and they're just given a list of things to do in whatever order they wish. I've run a few of these one shots before, and it's been successful at my table. I can't speak for everyone, but I think it's a nice way to mix things up. It's sort of like an open world campaign, but restricted to a single location. As I'm writing this, I think I didn't do as good of a job describing that as I should have -- I mostly focused on the example one-shot I've run before. I'll probably make a supplementary video to this later, or maybe replace it in a few years if I end up continuing making content. Who knows! Let me know what you think!