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How to homebrew a d&d class
How to homebrew a d&d class






how to homebrew a d&d class
  1. #HOW TO HOMEBREW A D&D CLASS HOW TO#
  2. #HOW TO HOMEBREW A D&D CLASS PLUS#

What if there was a blood-theme hag? (been there, done that).What if there was a nonmagical support class?.An exciting “what if” popped up in your head, and you’re compelled to pursue it:.Some DMs would forbid the offending spell/race, but that’s not my style. I also wanted to surprise the players if they ever went to the water, so I homebrewed nasty things that live in it.

how to homebrew a d&d class

CoS doesn’t have any underwater threats, which would make the water bodies a safe space-which I refuse to allow in this campaign.

  • A personal example: a Player Character (PC) in my Curse of Strahd (CoS) campaign is a Triton, which means he can breathe underwater, and this, in turn, made me realize how the Water Breathing spell can make Barovia a lot less scary.
  • Something your players do or have that forces you to counter it somewhat.
  • The lore of your world requires that X thing exists, and it doesn’t exist officially in D&D.
  • You want your players to have more stuff to choose from.
  • A character idea you’re in love with doesn’t fit a pre-existing option (this one’s for both DMs and players).
  • There are many reasons why you might decide to get busy making content for the most popular tabletop roleplaying game in the world.

    #HOW TO HOMEBREW A D&D CLASS HOW TO#

    5e: How to Homebrew Archetypes (Subclasses).

    how to homebrew a d&d class

  • Narrative: How do you become a member of this class? What powers it?.
  • One of 5e’s core design values is simplicity. With that in mind, let’s explore how you can go about brewing your own home stuff. Putting on a game-designer hat and getting to work on homebrew might sound like a daunting task at first, but 5e’s design makes it quite approachable. Take it from a guy who made a Cat Patron (more on that later) for warlocks with the express purpose of seeing his girlfriend’s eyes light up. A lot of homebrew comes from players’ unmet needs by the official content or creators’ desires to explore the possibilities of D&D as a medium/set of mechanics. Unofficial D&D content produced in a hobbyist or semi-professional fashion is broadly called homebrew by the game’s community. I also have a couple homebrew class archetypes up on the DM’s Guild.

    #HOW TO HOMEBREW A D&D CLASS PLUS#

    In the D&D campaigns I’m currently playing or DMing, there is a lot of unofficial content going on: I play Matt Mercer’s gunslinger, a friend plays his bloodhunter-two homebrews so ubiquitous a new player might mistake them for official-there’s a Fire Domain cleric and a Death-Touched sorcerer (which I co-designed with a fellow DM), plus heaps of original monsters, items, and more. On the go? Listen to the audio version of the article here:








    How to homebrew a d&d class