Have been writing an TTRPG adventure in obsidian recently. Ive written tons and tons of adventures over the years and I love obsidian, but this is the first time the two have overlapped.

Pretty interesting actually. Has changed how I chunk data, with intralinks and such.

Essentially making it a wiki.

I kinda love it tbh.

That and graph view for when you pieces that you haven't filled out yet and you see them as nodes all by their lonesome.

#obsidian #ttrpg

@fluxmind I've started using #Obsidian for taking notes from our #ttrpg game. Adding links meta tags makes it much easier to track all the NPCs, locations, factions and their members, etc.

@kevincasarez 100% can see that. I've used it for notes in general, love stuff, tech projects, etc. But I feel like I'm only now tapping into the advanced features.

I really like that I can see a visual representation of areas that are lacking content or don't interconnect to the larger plot as much as I thought they did.

Thinking I'm going to run this in shadowdark. It will be my first time running that system.

I'll post a teaser of the adventure later

@fluxmind In case you're not aware of it, some good things on this page that I have adopted and use for some of my Obsidian note-taking: https://nicolevanderhoeven.com/blog/20210930-non-lazy-dms-use-obsidian-for-dnd/
Non-Lazy DMs use Obsidian for D&D

Last month, I wrote about how I use Obsidian for D&D as a player in a 4e campaign (I play a half-elf hybrid wizard/cleric). This is about my second weekly game, in which I am the Dungeon Master for a 5e campaign. I’m a relatively new DM (I’ve got 39 games under my belt at the time this writing, and Obsidian is at the center of my workflow for improving my DMing skills, getting inspiration, preparing for a game, running the game, and making sure my players are having fun.

@kevincasarez thanks I'll definitely check it out