Site icon D&D Sage Advice

Matt Mercer DM Tips: Fixing GM Mistakes!

Role, here at Geek & Sundry, and welcome to
today’s episode of GM Tips, where we discuss

fixing GM mistakes.

[music]

MATT: Being the game master for an entire world,
guiding heroic players through stories from inside

your mind, can be an incredibly fun and rewarding
experience. However, you are not infallible.

Mistakes do happen. Perhaps a misinterpreted note
led to a conflict in story resolution, or an NPC

you designed to be integral ends up killed by the
party, you let slip a tiny tidbit of secret info

that undermines your big reveal, or you gift a
player with an item that is far too powerful than

you thought, throwing party in-game balance
entirely out of whack.

How do you correct these unintentional errors to
maintain the game you want to run? Well, let’s

discuss a number of solutions to these
challenges.

Let’s say you’re running an encounter that isn’t
intended to be that difficult. Either you

miscalculated the power of the enemies or the luck
was so against the party that a whimpering,

anticlimactic TPK is imminent. Here some examples
of how to correct that situation. You could

suddenly have an arrow or spell fly in from out of
nowhere, rocking one of the more dangerous foes,

and have an allied NPC enter the fray to save them
from the claws of defeat. You could also consider

that if it’s an intelligent foe, perhaps they see
the PCs’ terrible situation and see them worth

more alive and enslaved than dead. Have them fight
not to the death, and instead knock them

unconscious or force them to their knees and swear
themselves to the foe. This could even lead to a

cool escape or revenge-type mission in the near
future. You could also have a terrible, screeching

roar blast across the sky, and your enemies
suddenly look more frightened than they’ve ever

been before. They quickly assess their
situation, decide to flee, leaving you to the fate

of some possibly scarier creature. The wounded
party now has to hide from this mystery creature

to survive. Or you could just have them TPK and
explain how the darkness– or the light, possibly,

as well– fades as they awaken in a stone room,
shackled and held down. Suddenly, it appears that

a powerful mage has resurrected the party. Who
knows what plans he has for them? All he knows is

that they are a party of skilled heroes and they
have utility for such a powerful mage. (chuckles)

Now, mind you, if the encounter is intended to be
dangerous, challenging, and possibly deadly, let

the dice fall as it may. That’s part of the
game. You don’t want to undermine the ever-present

danger and tension of the game. However, you also
don’t want to completely end the story that you

and your players have put into for months and months
due to just an unexpectedly shitty scenario.

Another situation is you’ve given clues and
information and hints as to where to discover and

follow the main plot, but no one is figuring it
out or picking up on your nudges. The game is

quite literally going nowhere. Don’t be afraid to
be a little more blunt with your additional

information. While some hints may seem like
obvious reveals to you, you also already have all

the information in your head. A PC getting these
hints in a vacuum might end up either completely

confused or misinterpret the vague info and
extrapolate an entirely new and entirely wrong

plot. If it goes on too long, drop more direct
hints via NPCs they encounter, or have more clues

found as they go, or just reveal information as
part of the terrain as they progress forward.

You can tailor and reshuffle your intended plot
points and plot NPCs to be a little more direct

with their info, or even appear in unintended,
more convenient areas if the PCs aren’t as focused

or driven as you expected. Moving the plot along
for everyone’s benefit is more important than

adhering to a theoretical structure that you
created in your own little headspace.

Here’s another example of a situation: you’ve
offered information about your plot throughout the

game, and the players discover an accidental,
fairly large contradiction in your storytelling

that confuses them or undermines your entire
plot’s direction. First off, let them discuss the

confusion while you consider options and how to
retroactively disprove one side of that info. Pick

which side of the plot conflict is more
interesting to pursue, and let them seek answers

in-game as to which side is false. Perhaps an ally
who provided some of the info can now be revealed

to be a saboteur or a mole, or information was
planted by an unseen antagonistic force trying to

throw off the scent.

No reveal is immediately necessary. You can stall
for time between sessions to unravel your mistake

and make it work for you as opposed to against
you.

Another possibility is you accidentally spill a
lead, like an info leak or secret about your main

plot and spoil a grand surprise you’d been
looking forward to dropping down the road. First

off, don’t admit the mistake. Own it. Let the
party think you intentionally did so and follow

their lead. If needed, take a break shortly
thereafter, or, if possible, even between

sessions, and brainstorm a way to alter your
current story to enhance the reveal, or even

change it to be a bait-and-switch so you can still
surprise them later on. If it was indeed info

revealed by an NPC, you can also have that NPC
feed them a bunch of additional misinformation to

confuse the players into perhaps not believing
anything they’ve said. You can later play out that

they were either not in their right mind, like being
mentally controlled by some crazy witchcraft, or

perhaps a doppelganger trying to misinform the
party. Doppelgangers are always fun. Make your

party real nervous. Trust no one.

If the reveal was largely due to a very clever
player connecting the dots, don’t punish them for

being clever. Let them enjoy that victory. Just do
your best to not show any confirmation of their

deduction until it’s put into action, leaving them
to possibly second-guess their own idea in the

interim. Then, if they stick to it, reward them. I
mean, few moments for a PC really beat figuring

out the villain’s plot and watching it unfold
accordingly. Unless there’s nothing they can do to

stop the plot, and they’re fucked, in which
case, (nervous laugh).

Another mistake-based situation may involve you
giving a magical item or items to the party that

quickly appear to be way more powerful than you
anticipated. It completely wrecks your intended

game balance and can sometime cause the other PCs
to resent that unfair advantage that player now

has. Well, here are some suggested ways to handle
fixing that scenario. You could perhaps introduce

a very powerful entity who lost that magical item
or object and has been actively seeking it. They

stumble upon the PCs and offer, in exchange for
the item, other grand rewards and the favor of a

powerful being that they can keep in mind for
future use. Or the item can slowly be revealed to

be cursed: the longer they use it, the more
dangerous or penalizing it becomes. Now they must

quest to cleanse it, and while doing so lessens
its abilities, in the end, it can now be used

without issue, and they’ve earned that item’s true
use.

Another way would be: perhaps the enchantment was
unstable due to strange, arcane experiments and

the item shatters. It must now be reforged using
safer components, which produces a comparable, if

possibly lessened version that lasts indefinitely.
Or, by the time they repair the item, the party

has reached a power level where it seems to befit
the current game balance.

Not all these options are possible, and there are
many other awesome possibilities you can use to

fix these issues that you can find and research
online, but I hope these tips have at least been

somewhat helpful if one of these scenarios does
find its way into your campaign.

Thank you so much for watching. My name is Matthew
Mercer. You can find more GM Tips here at

GeekandSundry.com, and I’ll see you on the
internet.

[music]

Exit mobile version