Story Arcs | Nerdologists https://nerdologists.com Where to jump in on board games, anime, books, and movies as a Nerd Tue, 25 Mar 2025 16:17:23 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://nerdologists.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/nerdologists-favicon.png Story Arcs | Nerdologists https://nerdologists.com 32 32 Dungeon Master Tools – Story Arcs https://nerdologists.com/2025/03/dungeon-master-tools-story-arcs/ https://nerdologists.com/2025/03/dungeon-master-tools-story-arcs/#comments Tue, 25 Mar 2025 16:16:27 +0000 https://nerdologists.com/?p=9497 As a Dungeon Master, how do you plan out your campaign? We've done the pitch, a session 0, but now you're ready to play, what does it work.

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This is a tool that could have maybe come earlier for most Dungeon Masters. But it’s something that you see in television that I think works well for Dungeons and Dragons or other RPG’s. And it’s a tool that if you’re the Dungeon Master, I would keep in your back pocket. And it is going to make your life easier as you think about how you create your campaign.

Dungeon Master Tools – Story Arcs

What’s A Story Arc in Television?

Let’s start out with what is a story arc. I think for a lot of us, we know what it is. It’s going to be a series of episodes in television that all go together to tell a particular story. In television sometimes this is a whole season that is one story arc, but most of the time, you end up with smaller and shorter story arcs spread throughout the season. There is a whole through line of the main story, but the story arcs are all supporting that or supporting character development.

Why Use It in an RPG?

So why might you want to use it as a Dungeon Master in your game of Dungeons and Dragons? Well, because it makes your life simpler. Let’s say I have an idea for an epic campaign. I sit down to start jotting out notes.

Example

I come up with some big events that I want to happen, firstly, they need to find a treasure that is going to reveal this big plot. Then they need to fight a boss once they find him who will tell them about the larger scope of it and the world ending big bad. After that, they go and search for a way to defeat the big bad and meet a wizard who tells them about an artifact. Then they find the artifact. Finally, they face off against the big bad.

Too Much Work

That’s a lot in there. And you can see each sentence that I wrote is an arc. Now, the temptation is to start filling out everything. I write up where the treasure is in a dungeon and what’s in that dungeon. Next I create hints for this mid-level boss that I sprinkle in and create what the boss is going to be like. I start dropping in hints about the wizard and this other treasure and create their plot lines and what the party has to do to get the wizard to tell them about the artifact. And I make it so they run into the big bad early on but they don’t know it.

Eventually I script out the whole thing that is going on and I’ve spent tons of time creating my campaign. All of this is done before we even start playing the game and I’m feeling burned out on the story, possibly. Or the players catch who the big bad is right away or try and skip over elements that I put time into already.

Image Source: D&D Beyond

The Story Arc Way

So, is there a better way? Yes, the story arc way. One of the main things about tips is that I want to make it easy. I want it easier for the Dungeon Master to get a game going. Because, too much work keeps campaigns on hold forever.

Let’s talk about the better way. Firstly, it’s not bad to know where you want to go with the story. In fact, knowing some arcs, loosely isn’t bad. So what I wrote for example, that is going to be solid, but you want them to be bullet points.

Example Arcs
  • Find treasure
  • Fight Mid-level boss
  • Learn about Big Bad
  • Search for way to stop Big Bad
  • Get information from wizard
  • Find artifact
  • Confront big bad

There are what I would call seven arcs. What you do then is look at three things this list. Firstly, what do I need to know for the first arc. You want to plan out that arc only at this point. Keep it simple, give yourself something you can work with. Also ask yourself, are there arcs within this arc. If so, break it out more. You might break it out to sessions (episodes) like this.

Break it Down
  • Find Treasure
    • Get party together and get quest
    • Find where the dungeon is and travel there
    • Explore dungeon

Now as you look at that it’s easier to work with. That is what you want to get planned out. In fact, you just want to get the party together and get them the quest. We went through this in the Session 1 article. You want to simply focus on that element of your game and plan out that session. But as I said, keep on eye on a few things. So besides your current arc, also look for your next arc and session. For the next arc, maybe not right away, but drop in a hint. For the next session, as you plan your session, make it lead to the right point to kick off the next session.

The final thing is, does it make sense for the overall plot. This isn’t about the final big bad fight. But thematically, is the story leading where you want it to go. Or is the arc and what you are planning going against it. Now that might be on purpose, or it might not, so think about that.

Let’s Recap

So let’s just do a quick recap for using story arcs as a Dungeon Master.

  • Bullet point out your story arcs
  • Focus only on the first arc
  • Break that first arc into sessions if it makes sense
  • Fill out details a session at a time
  • Make sure the session leads to the next session
  • Hint at next arc, if it makes sense
  • Verify that the arc and session serve the overall story

That is a pretty long list. Longer than I want it to be. But to sum it up in a sentence or two, let’s try that.

Worry about only the arc and session you are on as you plan. You know the other arcs will come, but don’t plan them all at once.

There, that’s much simpler. So start using arcs and planning in bullet points. See if it can take the pressure off planning everything. And going back to the campaign article and kicking that off, this planning starts after you have a group together and people excited for a campaign, not before. You plan your arc and session only when you are ready to start playing.

Final Thoughts

This is a technique that I use a little bit. I generally hold a lot of this information in my head. But I want to start using it more as a thirty minute pre-session planning activity, or maybe more than that. Because it is going to help me keep track of everything and what happens. But even for myself who loves playing and running games of Dungeons and Dragons as the Dungeon Master, I don’t want to spend all my time prepping. I want to play the game.

Do you think this is something you can incorporate as a Dungeon Master?

What’s next:

  • World Building
  • Combat
  • Exploration
  • NPCs/Social Interactions
  • Meta Game and Players at the Table

And let me know if there are other things to cover as well that you want to know more about, or help with. I think that there are a ton of different things that new Dungeon Masters are curious about or that feel intimidating. So I hope that I can help make them clearer and simpler for you.

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This is Halloween: Anime https://nerdologists.com/2018/10/this-is-halloween-anime/ https://nerdologists.com/2018/10/this-is-halloween-anime/#respond Wed, 10 Oct 2018 12:54:40 +0000 http://nerdologists.com/?p=2535 I was having some troubles coming up with animes for this one. There are very few animes that I’ve watched which I’d consider just to

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I was having some troubles coming up with animes for this one. There are very few animes that I’ve watched which I’d consider just to be horror or just to be Halloween themed. There are a number of them that have bits and pieces of it, but will then have a focus that goes somewhere else, but I’ve come up with a few that have a bit of that Halloween feel to them.

Image Source: My Anime List

Little Witch Academia

It’s about witches, it counts. This show isn’t so much a horror show but gives you that more fun kid focused Halloween feel. It’s about a girl who doesn’t have that much magical talent but really wants to become a witch, like her hero Shiny Chariot. It follows her adventures and misadventures around the school and sometimes deals with deeper things, but often times is just cute and goofy.  It definitely doesn’t fit the horror side of Halloween at all, but still feels properly thematic for the holiday.

Ghost Hunt

This is the opposite of Little Witch Academia, it’s about a paranormal investigator and the high school girl who helps him on the investigations, there are also other people who help as well from time to time. The cases they take on are often quite horrific and they definitely go for some jump scares, but mainly it’s just intense and disturbing. One thing that I really enjoy about this anime is that the cases are fairly short. So instead of just have one off episodes facing off against a monster, you get three to five episodes, but it isn’t isn’t so much that the whole show feels like it’s dragging out a single story.

Tokyo Ravens

I actually wouldn’t recommend this anime too highly because the story is just okay. However, it does fit into the Halloween theme as there are some horror elements in there. It’s about a group of students who are fighting against monsters in the system of their world. The plot is a little bit thin and predictable, however, and it has some of the weirder anime dynamics.

Image Source: Funimation

Blood Blockade Battlefront

Another one that I wouldn’t completely call traditional Halloween. This show definitely doesn’t have the purest horror feel, but in a world where there was a convergence between two worlds and there are crazy alien creatures and humans living together, it does fit into the Halloween theme. It’s also not like this show doesn’t have some weird or unsettling things that are horror like as well. This is a very well done anime, and the story arcs, especially in the first season, are really well done. Probably the best part about the anime is the world that was built. It’s so crazy and so well done. The one downside for me is the build up to the moves, where they announce them and you see it written on the screen as well. The anime is also very pretty to watch as compared to some of the other ones.

Case in point: Excalibur from Soul Eater will take you on a random flight of madness and poorly told stories.
Image Credit: souleater.wikia

Soul Eater

Death is leading a school that is going to fight witches, what could be more Halloween? Probably quite a number of animes, but this one does have a few undertones that match up with Halloween. This falls into the same category as Little Witch Academia where it’s much sillier. But it has that goofy kids feeling for Halloween while getting heavier and darker at times. The anime doesn’t end extremely well, but generally is a really fun anime. I would compare it to the heaviness of a movie like A Nightmare Before Christmas, where it can have a couple creepy moments here and there, but generally is more light hearted, and it has one of the better anime characters of all time in Excalibur, he sings with a voice like an angel.

Now, I’m sure there are a ton more animes that I could have mentioned, had I watched them. I thought about D.Gray-man, but the anime is just too long for the amount of story that happens in it, and I might have given up on completing it because I didn’t care that much about what was happening in it anymore. There are other animes that I’ve seen which have some horror episodes are smaller horror arcs, but generally don’t give off a monster,  horror, or Halloween feeling like the animes that I’m looking for in these articles.

What are some of your favorite horror based animes? I know that I’m always looking for more that are good in that genre.


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