June 16, 2026

Who Do You Write For?

It's in the title - when you sit down to write a post, who is it for? 

I had a conversation with friend of the blog Weird Writer (Roll To Doubt) today and it got me curious what others think:

I think I write for my younger self - it's why most of this is pretty in-depth theory. I first discovered OSR TTRPGs when I was about 16 or 17 with Into the Odd. The book has great advice, and I heard it but I didn't listen to it. I was at this robotics competition in upstate Arizona running a poorly adapted Tomb of the Serpent Kings I had made on the bus the way there. I ran the game on the crowded floor for a group of four or five people I don't really talk to anymore in between the hours-long wait between competition rounds. The environment was loud, I had to shout, my voice cracked often. The game ended unceremoniously when the bell rang and we had to go up and lose our competition. 

I remember being horribly anxious but something kept drawing me back. I suppose that's why I write the way I do - why I focus on theory and process and structure. While the experience sounds (and was) glorious, a good game benefits from a sense of structure. Otherwise it's just a passtime. Although, who is to say that a passtime isn't just as valid? This is a social activity first and foremost, after all.

I want to hear your answer in the comments or on your own blogs. 

Who do you write for? 

Art by me

 

June 12, 2026

In Favor Of Repetition

There's a temptation when making dungeons in TTRPGs to make every structure unique in some kind of way. The players are expecting something fresh - "They've already seen a temple, let's make a tower. They've already seen a tower, let's make a prison. They've already seen a prison, let's make..." 

It's an understandable impulse, however it's quite easy to write yourself into a corner by doing this. First, the impulse is rooted in overanalysis, which gets in the way of actually playing the game. Second, there's only so many structures out there.

Of course, you still want your players to feel they are exploring a living, breathing, varied world. So, how do we approach this problem?

By Jef Wu
Embrace the repetition. The fact is that a repeated kind of structure can actually passively reinforce themes and "gamefeel" within your world. As an example, let's take a look to The Legend of Zelda. In Breath of the Wild, almost every dungeon is set inside the innards of a great mechanical divine animals or a shrine. It sets a mood where the magic, the divine, and the bestial are inherently interlinked. Another example, Elden Ring. While there is more variety here, a large portion of the dungeons are castles or crypts - most in some stage of active ruin. It sets a far different tone, of a dying land where despite it all the imperial instinct still reigns. 

The developers know they do not need to reinvent the wheel with every new area. Despite the similar structures, the player is still entertained. Things are shaken up by how themes within the structure express themselves For example, the theme of water in the elephant beast Vah Ruta as expressed by the trunk-fountain puzzle mechanic present throughout the entire dungeon. Another example, the themes of amputation and grafting in Stormveil Castle as expressed by their enemies like birds with swords for legs and Godrick the Grafted.

When making a setting, it can be valuable to embrace repetition in this aspect. Choose two or three structures which you feel comfortable creating and show up often in play. Think about what their common presence says about your world. Think about what one says about the other. Differentiate the individual dungeons not by their kind of structure, but by their themes. When creating and stocking them, focus on expressing the themes through room contents, enemies, traps, puzzles, gimmicks, lore, random encounters, treasures, NPCs, etc.

Here is a small list of possible primary structure pairings and large speculations in what they may imply about your world:

  1. Tombs and Towers. Perhaps the miserable dead roam the earth and people have taken refuge in sky-feifs ruled by warring wizard-kings. Or wizards cast devastating spells from their havens, turning the world to a blasted cratered land and humanity has had to hide in crypt-societies which commonly raid one another for ever-dwindling resources. Either way, the world will be a vertical one with soaring heights and shadowy depths.

  2. Manors and Vaults. Perhaps the rich have turned monstrous (more than they already were), and cling to treasures now-useless to them, stored their manors and vaults. Or there was a great revolution and your player characters are assigned to go about toppling the last of the old money, holed up and ready to defend what they have. Either way, the world is (or was) an opulent one.

  3. Trees and Temples. Perhaps the gods grant blessings in growing great trees in the earth, and their demigod children live in the boughs while strange priests roam temple halls. Or a vengeful god laid a curse upon the land for insufficient worship and the earth is overgrown - all remaining are signs of past worship warped to kill that which used to tend to them. Either way, the world is one where nature thrives - and maybe worship and nature are related in some fashion.

  4. Beast-Innards and Butcheries. Perhaps once upon a time great beasts roamed the lands until man killed them and learned to live off them. Or the beasts still roam the land and man has split into game-hunting butcher-tribes, following the next hunt to prove their glory. Either way, the world is one where meat and the flesh is important.

  5. Schools and Prisons. Perhaps the world is split into a caste system where the magic-users are taught and those deemed unworthy are sent to toil. Or magic-users were imprisoned long ago, and the schools where they were taught their wicked ways still hold secrets. Either way, education and crime will be themes in some sense.

- EDIT - 

It appears that I've accidentally started a small bandwagon! Check out other author's thoughts on this below, it's all worth a read:

If you've made a post and I didn't include it, comment below - I'll read it and add it! 

June 03, 2026

Worldbuilding When You Have No Ideas

This is how you make a small setting in a day when none of your ideas feel good enough, or you can't come up with any at all. It is, in part, a variation on this post. Though I do not think you need to have read it to understand this one. I'll keep this quick.

By Ryan @__SolS on Twitter

This is what you will need to do:

Take a book, any book, and highlight six phrases per spread. These can be anything, as long as they stand out to you. They do not even need to be complete sentences. Do this until every spread in the book is highlighted in this fashion. Keep it cursory.

Flip to a random page, roll 1d6. Look for the highlighted phrase that matches the result. The first highlighted phrase on the spread is 1 on the die, the second 2, and so on... Write it down.

Do this three times. Write the phrases next to each other.

You will have a small, poemlike piece of nonsense that should only take a minute to form. For instance - taking from a large book of Shakespeare I own:    

We came into the world like brother and brother:
God give his lordship joy!
it were mortal poison, for thy sake!

Use the result as inspiration to answer a worldbuilding question below. Then roll another and repeat. 

The questions provided are split into three sections: The Town, The Wilderness, and The Dungeon. That is all you truly need to start a game.

The Town:

  1. Where is the town? Why would you live here? 
  2. What is the town known for by outsiders?
  3. Who or what governs this place? How do they govern?
  4. What is this town's biggest problem? How do they deal with it or hide it?

The Wilderness: 

  1. What is the wilderness known for by outsiders?
  2. What is the most beautiful thing in the wilderness? What about the ugliest?
  3. Who or what calls the wilderness their home? How do they mark and protect their territory?
  4. What resources does the wilderness possess? Who is actively looking to exploit this? 

The Dungeon:

  1. Where is the dungeon? What did this place use to be? 
  2. Why would you risk your life to be here?
  3. Who or what guards the interior? What are their defenses?
  4. What treasure lies here? Who is actively seeking it?

Answer the questions to the best of your ability. Chase whatever inspiration comes to you, no matter how silly you may think it. Do not worry about representing the rolled result as a whole in your answer - if something small stands out strongly to you, run with it. Use information from previous questions to inform the current question you are answering, if you think it is relevant. If all goes well, this should serve as a unique base for more solid prepwork.

From The Third Mind, by William Burroughs and Brion Gysin