What is the best number of combat encounters for a 6-player level-3 party in one adventuring day? [on hold]
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5
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Soon, I'll be hosting a D&D session for six 3rd-level characters, but I was having some difficulty on deciding the amount of encounters. Our sessions typically last 6-8 hours.
Everyone has some experience with tabletop gaming, but there are three players completely new to D&D. I want to show off the system with some interesting and challenging encounters.
I've been using Kobold Fight Club to calculate the difficulty, but have heard it is calculated with 6-8 combat encounters a day in mind. As things are, I have five encounters planned which all seem to be hard to very hard . After certain points the players could decide to take a long rest for resets. This makes it especially hard to decide on a difficulty.
One battle, for example, is a fight with a hydra that will most likely get the drop on them. It is ranked "very hard", but with six players I'm quite sure they will defeat the hydra relatively quickly, even with its regeneration.
To avoid making the game longer, and to leave time for roleplay, social encounters, and shopping I'd rather refrain from having too much combat during each session.
How can I scale the challenge rating and the number of encounters in one adventuring day with a party like this? Or will the difference not be as great as I think it will?
dnd-5e encounter-design difficulty
put on hold as too broad by Miniman, Longspeak, Oblivious Sage, Ruse, NathanS Dec 2 at 9:02
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
favorite
Soon, I'll be hosting a D&D session for six 3rd-level characters, but I was having some difficulty on deciding the amount of encounters. Our sessions typically last 6-8 hours.
Everyone has some experience with tabletop gaming, but there are three players completely new to D&D. I want to show off the system with some interesting and challenging encounters.
I've been using Kobold Fight Club to calculate the difficulty, but have heard it is calculated with 6-8 combat encounters a day in mind. As things are, I have five encounters planned which all seem to be hard to very hard . After certain points the players could decide to take a long rest for resets. This makes it especially hard to decide on a difficulty.
One battle, for example, is a fight with a hydra that will most likely get the drop on them. It is ranked "very hard", but with six players I'm quite sure they will defeat the hydra relatively quickly, even with its regeneration.
To avoid making the game longer, and to leave time for roleplay, social encounters, and shopping I'd rather refrain from having too much combat during each session.
How can I scale the challenge rating and the number of encounters in one adventuring day with a party like this? Or will the difference not be as great as I think it will?
dnd-5e encounter-design difficulty
put on hold as too broad by Miniman, Longspeak, Oblivious Sage, Ruse, NathanS Dec 2 at 9:02
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
Are you willing to accept an answer that does not include a long rest? Are you familiar with the XP per Adventure Day Budget in the Basic Rules?
– KorvinStarmast
Nov 26 at 16:38
I meant how many encounters for one adventuring day, sorry for the unclarity. Also there does not have to be a long rest but I know my players will probaply ask for one as soon as their abilities start running out.
– Kyllion
Nov 26 at 16:54
My sessions range from 6 to 8 hours.
– Kyllion
Nov 26 at 16:56
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
favorite
up vote
5
down vote
favorite
Soon, I'll be hosting a D&D session for six 3rd-level characters, but I was having some difficulty on deciding the amount of encounters. Our sessions typically last 6-8 hours.
Everyone has some experience with tabletop gaming, but there are three players completely new to D&D. I want to show off the system with some interesting and challenging encounters.
I've been using Kobold Fight Club to calculate the difficulty, but have heard it is calculated with 6-8 combat encounters a day in mind. As things are, I have five encounters planned which all seem to be hard to very hard . After certain points the players could decide to take a long rest for resets. This makes it especially hard to decide on a difficulty.
One battle, for example, is a fight with a hydra that will most likely get the drop on them. It is ranked "very hard", but with six players I'm quite sure they will defeat the hydra relatively quickly, even with its regeneration.
To avoid making the game longer, and to leave time for roleplay, social encounters, and shopping I'd rather refrain from having too much combat during each session.
How can I scale the challenge rating and the number of encounters in one adventuring day with a party like this? Or will the difference not be as great as I think it will?
dnd-5e encounter-design difficulty
Soon, I'll be hosting a D&D session for six 3rd-level characters, but I was having some difficulty on deciding the amount of encounters. Our sessions typically last 6-8 hours.
Everyone has some experience with tabletop gaming, but there are three players completely new to D&D. I want to show off the system with some interesting and challenging encounters.
I've been using Kobold Fight Club to calculate the difficulty, but have heard it is calculated with 6-8 combat encounters a day in mind. As things are, I have five encounters planned which all seem to be hard to very hard . After certain points the players could decide to take a long rest for resets. This makes it especially hard to decide on a difficulty.
One battle, for example, is a fight with a hydra that will most likely get the drop on them. It is ranked "very hard", but with six players I'm quite sure they will defeat the hydra relatively quickly, even with its regeneration.
To avoid making the game longer, and to leave time for roleplay, social encounters, and shopping I'd rather refrain from having too much combat during each session.
How can I scale the challenge rating and the number of encounters in one adventuring day with a party like this? Or will the difference not be as great as I think it will?
dnd-5e encounter-design difficulty
dnd-5e encounter-design difficulty
edited Nov 27 at 1:27
V2Blast
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18.6k250115
asked Nov 26 at 16:20
Kyllion
284
284
put on hold as too broad by Miniman, Longspeak, Oblivious Sage, Ruse, NathanS Dec 2 at 9:02
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
put on hold as too broad by Miniman, Longspeak, Oblivious Sage, Ruse, NathanS Dec 2 at 9:02
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
Are you willing to accept an answer that does not include a long rest? Are you familiar with the XP per Adventure Day Budget in the Basic Rules?
– KorvinStarmast
Nov 26 at 16:38
I meant how many encounters for one adventuring day, sorry for the unclarity. Also there does not have to be a long rest but I know my players will probaply ask for one as soon as their abilities start running out.
– Kyllion
Nov 26 at 16:54
My sessions range from 6 to 8 hours.
– Kyllion
Nov 26 at 16:56
add a comment |
Are you willing to accept an answer that does not include a long rest? Are you familiar with the XP per Adventure Day Budget in the Basic Rules?
– KorvinStarmast
Nov 26 at 16:38
I meant how many encounters for one adventuring day, sorry for the unclarity. Also there does not have to be a long rest but I know my players will probaply ask for one as soon as their abilities start running out.
– Kyllion
Nov 26 at 16:54
My sessions range from 6 to 8 hours.
– Kyllion
Nov 26 at 16:56
Are you willing to accept an answer that does not include a long rest? Are you familiar with the XP per Adventure Day Budget in the Basic Rules?
– KorvinStarmast
Nov 26 at 16:38
Are you willing to accept an answer that does not include a long rest? Are you familiar with the XP per Adventure Day Budget in the Basic Rules?
– KorvinStarmast
Nov 26 at 16:38
I meant how many encounters for one adventuring day, sorry for the unclarity. Also there does not have to be a long rest but I know my players will probaply ask for one as soon as their abilities start running out.
– Kyllion
Nov 26 at 16:54
I meant how many encounters for one adventuring day, sorry for the unclarity. Also there does not have to be a long rest but I know my players will probaply ask for one as soon as their abilities start running out.
– Kyllion
Nov 26 at 16:54
My sessions range from 6 to 8 hours.
– Kyllion
Nov 26 at 16:56
My sessions range from 6 to 8 hours.
– Kyllion
Nov 26 at 16:56
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
up vote
14
down vote
accepted
Resource management and you
What this ultimately comes down is what type of game you and your table want to play. A big part of D&D is resource management and the encounter system is a major contributor to the expenditure of those resources.
How you want to manage and challenge your party is very much going to be up to you. But that doesn't mean that this is opinion-based as there are many factors and options to consider.
Time is a limiting factor
The first thing to consider when planning is how much time you have. You've stated that your sessions are 6-8 hours and that you'd like opportunity for both roleplay and combat.
My own experience has shown that for parties of 6, you can usually get 2-3 extended combats and a roleplay opportunity within that time. The larger the group, the more time combat will likely take as you have each players turns to consider and the time they'll take.
Time may also be a consideration in-game as well. If you're only able to do 2-4 total encounters per session, it may take 2-3 sessions (or more) in order to be able to have a long rest and refresh the resources. If your players understand and are on board with that, then you can work with that - but it does mean they'll have to wait in order to get that long rest.
Encounter volume and difficulty
One thing I've noticed is that "easier" encounters tend to not tax resources at all. You are effectively trading session-time for an encounter that may not drain any actual resources. That's not a bad thing, but it's something to consider. If the point of encounters is resource management, but they're avoiding the use of resources because the encounter was simple, then you've mostly just lost time in session for something that hasn't made an impact on their resource planning.
This doesn't mean you should go the other way and do the 15 minute adventuring day and have a single very difficult and extended battle, but it's something I've considered in my planning.
It's also important to consider that the recommended 6-8 isn't limited to combat encounters, but encounters in general. Chapter 3 of the DMG covers a lot of this and lists sample encounters that cover both RP, Combat, and a mix.
Challenge and on the fly planning
What I tend to do is build fights that are very difficult according to Kobold Fight Club, and see how they go with the players. C0nsider the in-game time and see how things pan out with the battles. You can add combat to the adventuring day or postpone them based on your players resources.
Playing your monsters
It's also important to consider the intelligence, planning, and in-combat response that your monsters will have. Intelligent monsters played intelligently are going to be very difficult and present more problems for your players to solve. Don't be afraid to swing hard - you can always back off or present/accept opportunities for your players to do creative things.
Rests
For rests, I do follow the 1 Long Rest/day requirement. If they use a lot of resources first thing in the morning, then that's something they'll need to deal with throughout the day.
For Short Rests, I'll allow their use as long as it makes sense in-game. Wanting to rest after every fight could be a thing, but that's why there are generally other in-game things going on that suggest expediency is a thing so that they don't dawdle. Taking that hour could happen, but then they may miss out on completing the larger mission, meeting an important NPC, etc.
My planning style
I generally plan for about 2-3 very difficult combats per adventuring day along with 1-2 roleplay opportunities. This seems to allow for challenging fights and fun roleplay within a session and not make the players feel like they're waiting forever for a resource refresh - or that the fights are so simple to not require resources and just an easy slog.
I often have an encounter scheme set up and monsters I can use, but then will adjust depending on how it's going to keep it fun for everyone. Too easy isn't fun, and TPKs usually aren't fun, either.
I also try and make it more than just Kill Everyone. Resolutions outside combat can be an option, 'games' within the combat (prevent the door from closing, hold the passage until reinforcements arrive, etc.), and environmental considerations can also make the combat more interesting. You can read up some interesting cinematic combat ideas here.
1
While I appreciate the quick acceptance, and it's very much up to you when you want to accept an answer, you may get other answers that you like better or end being more useful. I typically wait about a day before accepting, but that's not a standard nor is it a requirement. You do you and welcome to the site!
– NautArch
Nov 26 at 18:04
Wow thanks for the very detailed description. I'll reduce the amount of encounters and keep the difficulity.
– Kyllion
Nov 26 at 18:08
@Kyllion You'll definitely learn as you move forward, too. Don't be afraid to adjust the encounters on the fly as well and improvise. I often have an encounter scheme set up and monsters I can use, but then will adjust depending on how it's going to keep it fun for everyone. Too easy isn't fun, and TPKs usually aren't fun, either.
– NautArch
Nov 26 at 18:12
Oh okay, I chose your answer because I found it very useful and it answered my question with some great tips and advice. I did not expect to get an answer that would be 'better' to be honest. I've had different experiences with sites like this one, so I was rather suprised haha
– Kyllion
Nov 26 at 18:14
1
@illustro Yah - I added a bit referencing Chapter 3 of the DMG to the Encounter Volume section.
– NautArch
Nov 26 at 19:21
|
show 5 more comments
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
14
down vote
accepted
Resource management and you
What this ultimately comes down is what type of game you and your table want to play. A big part of D&D is resource management and the encounter system is a major contributor to the expenditure of those resources.
How you want to manage and challenge your party is very much going to be up to you. But that doesn't mean that this is opinion-based as there are many factors and options to consider.
Time is a limiting factor
The first thing to consider when planning is how much time you have. You've stated that your sessions are 6-8 hours and that you'd like opportunity for both roleplay and combat.
My own experience has shown that for parties of 6, you can usually get 2-3 extended combats and a roleplay opportunity within that time. The larger the group, the more time combat will likely take as you have each players turns to consider and the time they'll take.
Time may also be a consideration in-game as well. If you're only able to do 2-4 total encounters per session, it may take 2-3 sessions (or more) in order to be able to have a long rest and refresh the resources. If your players understand and are on board with that, then you can work with that - but it does mean they'll have to wait in order to get that long rest.
Encounter volume and difficulty
One thing I've noticed is that "easier" encounters tend to not tax resources at all. You are effectively trading session-time for an encounter that may not drain any actual resources. That's not a bad thing, but it's something to consider. If the point of encounters is resource management, but they're avoiding the use of resources because the encounter was simple, then you've mostly just lost time in session for something that hasn't made an impact on their resource planning.
This doesn't mean you should go the other way and do the 15 minute adventuring day and have a single very difficult and extended battle, but it's something I've considered in my planning.
It's also important to consider that the recommended 6-8 isn't limited to combat encounters, but encounters in general. Chapter 3 of the DMG covers a lot of this and lists sample encounters that cover both RP, Combat, and a mix.
Challenge and on the fly planning
What I tend to do is build fights that are very difficult according to Kobold Fight Club, and see how they go with the players. C0nsider the in-game time and see how things pan out with the battles. You can add combat to the adventuring day or postpone them based on your players resources.
Playing your monsters
It's also important to consider the intelligence, planning, and in-combat response that your monsters will have. Intelligent monsters played intelligently are going to be very difficult and present more problems for your players to solve. Don't be afraid to swing hard - you can always back off or present/accept opportunities for your players to do creative things.
Rests
For rests, I do follow the 1 Long Rest/day requirement. If they use a lot of resources first thing in the morning, then that's something they'll need to deal with throughout the day.
For Short Rests, I'll allow their use as long as it makes sense in-game. Wanting to rest after every fight could be a thing, but that's why there are generally other in-game things going on that suggest expediency is a thing so that they don't dawdle. Taking that hour could happen, but then they may miss out on completing the larger mission, meeting an important NPC, etc.
My planning style
I generally plan for about 2-3 very difficult combats per adventuring day along with 1-2 roleplay opportunities. This seems to allow for challenging fights and fun roleplay within a session and not make the players feel like they're waiting forever for a resource refresh - or that the fights are so simple to not require resources and just an easy slog.
I often have an encounter scheme set up and monsters I can use, but then will adjust depending on how it's going to keep it fun for everyone. Too easy isn't fun, and TPKs usually aren't fun, either.
I also try and make it more than just Kill Everyone. Resolutions outside combat can be an option, 'games' within the combat (prevent the door from closing, hold the passage until reinforcements arrive, etc.), and environmental considerations can also make the combat more interesting. You can read up some interesting cinematic combat ideas here.
1
While I appreciate the quick acceptance, and it's very much up to you when you want to accept an answer, you may get other answers that you like better or end being more useful. I typically wait about a day before accepting, but that's not a standard nor is it a requirement. You do you and welcome to the site!
– NautArch
Nov 26 at 18:04
Wow thanks for the very detailed description. I'll reduce the amount of encounters and keep the difficulity.
– Kyllion
Nov 26 at 18:08
@Kyllion You'll definitely learn as you move forward, too. Don't be afraid to adjust the encounters on the fly as well and improvise. I often have an encounter scheme set up and monsters I can use, but then will adjust depending on how it's going to keep it fun for everyone. Too easy isn't fun, and TPKs usually aren't fun, either.
– NautArch
Nov 26 at 18:12
Oh okay, I chose your answer because I found it very useful and it answered my question with some great tips and advice. I did not expect to get an answer that would be 'better' to be honest. I've had different experiences with sites like this one, so I was rather suprised haha
– Kyllion
Nov 26 at 18:14
1
@illustro Yah - I added a bit referencing Chapter 3 of the DMG to the Encounter Volume section.
– NautArch
Nov 26 at 19:21
|
show 5 more comments
up vote
14
down vote
accepted
Resource management and you
What this ultimately comes down is what type of game you and your table want to play. A big part of D&D is resource management and the encounter system is a major contributor to the expenditure of those resources.
How you want to manage and challenge your party is very much going to be up to you. But that doesn't mean that this is opinion-based as there are many factors and options to consider.
Time is a limiting factor
The first thing to consider when planning is how much time you have. You've stated that your sessions are 6-8 hours and that you'd like opportunity for both roleplay and combat.
My own experience has shown that for parties of 6, you can usually get 2-3 extended combats and a roleplay opportunity within that time. The larger the group, the more time combat will likely take as you have each players turns to consider and the time they'll take.
Time may also be a consideration in-game as well. If you're only able to do 2-4 total encounters per session, it may take 2-3 sessions (or more) in order to be able to have a long rest and refresh the resources. If your players understand and are on board with that, then you can work with that - but it does mean they'll have to wait in order to get that long rest.
Encounter volume and difficulty
One thing I've noticed is that "easier" encounters tend to not tax resources at all. You are effectively trading session-time for an encounter that may not drain any actual resources. That's not a bad thing, but it's something to consider. If the point of encounters is resource management, but they're avoiding the use of resources because the encounter was simple, then you've mostly just lost time in session for something that hasn't made an impact on their resource planning.
This doesn't mean you should go the other way and do the 15 minute adventuring day and have a single very difficult and extended battle, but it's something I've considered in my planning.
It's also important to consider that the recommended 6-8 isn't limited to combat encounters, but encounters in general. Chapter 3 of the DMG covers a lot of this and lists sample encounters that cover both RP, Combat, and a mix.
Challenge and on the fly planning
What I tend to do is build fights that are very difficult according to Kobold Fight Club, and see how they go with the players. C0nsider the in-game time and see how things pan out with the battles. You can add combat to the adventuring day or postpone them based on your players resources.
Playing your monsters
It's also important to consider the intelligence, planning, and in-combat response that your monsters will have. Intelligent monsters played intelligently are going to be very difficult and present more problems for your players to solve. Don't be afraid to swing hard - you can always back off or present/accept opportunities for your players to do creative things.
Rests
For rests, I do follow the 1 Long Rest/day requirement. If they use a lot of resources first thing in the morning, then that's something they'll need to deal with throughout the day.
For Short Rests, I'll allow their use as long as it makes sense in-game. Wanting to rest after every fight could be a thing, but that's why there are generally other in-game things going on that suggest expediency is a thing so that they don't dawdle. Taking that hour could happen, but then they may miss out on completing the larger mission, meeting an important NPC, etc.
My planning style
I generally plan for about 2-3 very difficult combats per adventuring day along with 1-2 roleplay opportunities. This seems to allow for challenging fights and fun roleplay within a session and not make the players feel like they're waiting forever for a resource refresh - or that the fights are so simple to not require resources and just an easy slog.
I often have an encounter scheme set up and monsters I can use, but then will adjust depending on how it's going to keep it fun for everyone. Too easy isn't fun, and TPKs usually aren't fun, either.
I also try and make it more than just Kill Everyone. Resolutions outside combat can be an option, 'games' within the combat (prevent the door from closing, hold the passage until reinforcements arrive, etc.), and environmental considerations can also make the combat more interesting. You can read up some interesting cinematic combat ideas here.
1
While I appreciate the quick acceptance, and it's very much up to you when you want to accept an answer, you may get other answers that you like better or end being more useful. I typically wait about a day before accepting, but that's not a standard nor is it a requirement. You do you and welcome to the site!
– NautArch
Nov 26 at 18:04
Wow thanks for the very detailed description. I'll reduce the amount of encounters and keep the difficulity.
– Kyllion
Nov 26 at 18:08
@Kyllion You'll definitely learn as you move forward, too. Don't be afraid to adjust the encounters on the fly as well and improvise. I often have an encounter scheme set up and monsters I can use, but then will adjust depending on how it's going to keep it fun for everyone. Too easy isn't fun, and TPKs usually aren't fun, either.
– NautArch
Nov 26 at 18:12
Oh okay, I chose your answer because I found it very useful and it answered my question with some great tips and advice. I did not expect to get an answer that would be 'better' to be honest. I've had different experiences with sites like this one, so I was rather suprised haha
– Kyllion
Nov 26 at 18:14
1
@illustro Yah - I added a bit referencing Chapter 3 of the DMG to the Encounter Volume section.
– NautArch
Nov 26 at 19:21
|
show 5 more comments
up vote
14
down vote
accepted
up vote
14
down vote
accepted
Resource management and you
What this ultimately comes down is what type of game you and your table want to play. A big part of D&D is resource management and the encounter system is a major contributor to the expenditure of those resources.
How you want to manage and challenge your party is very much going to be up to you. But that doesn't mean that this is opinion-based as there are many factors and options to consider.
Time is a limiting factor
The first thing to consider when planning is how much time you have. You've stated that your sessions are 6-8 hours and that you'd like opportunity for both roleplay and combat.
My own experience has shown that for parties of 6, you can usually get 2-3 extended combats and a roleplay opportunity within that time. The larger the group, the more time combat will likely take as you have each players turns to consider and the time they'll take.
Time may also be a consideration in-game as well. If you're only able to do 2-4 total encounters per session, it may take 2-3 sessions (or more) in order to be able to have a long rest and refresh the resources. If your players understand and are on board with that, then you can work with that - but it does mean they'll have to wait in order to get that long rest.
Encounter volume and difficulty
One thing I've noticed is that "easier" encounters tend to not tax resources at all. You are effectively trading session-time for an encounter that may not drain any actual resources. That's not a bad thing, but it's something to consider. If the point of encounters is resource management, but they're avoiding the use of resources because the encounter was simple, then you've mostly just lost time in session for something that hasn't made an impact on their resource planning.
This doesn't mean you should go the other way and do the 15 minute adventuring day and have a single very difficult and extended battle, but it's something I've considered in my planning.
It's also important to consider that the recommended 6-8 isn't limited to combat encounters, but encounters in general. Chapter 3 of the DMG covers a lot of this and lists sample encounters that cover both RP, Combat, and a mix.
Challenge and on the fly planning
What I tend to do is build fights that are very difficult according to Kobold Fight Club, and see how they go with the players. C0nsider the in-game time and see how things pan out with the battles. You can add combat to the adventuring day or postpone them based on your players resources.
Playing your monsters
It's also important to consider the intelligence, planning, and in-combat response that your monsters will have. Intelligent monsters played intelligently are going to be very difficult and present more problems for your players to solve. Don't be afraid to swing hard - you can always back off or present/accept opportunities for your players to do creative things.
Rests
For rests, I do follow the 1 Long Rest/day requirement. If they use a lot of resources first thing in the morning, then that's something they'll need to deal with throughout the day.
For Short Rests, I'll allow their use as long as it makes sense in-game. Wanting to rest after every fight could be a thing, but that's why there are generally other in-game things going on that suggest expediency is a thing so that they don't dawdle. Taking that hour could happen, but then they may miss out on completing the larger mission, meeting an important NPC, etc.
My planning style
I generally plan for about 2-3 very difficult combats per adventuring day along with 1-2 roleplay opportunities. This seems to allow for challenging fights and fun roleplay within a session and not make the players feel like they're waiting forever for a resource refresh - or that the fights are so simple to not require resources and just an easy slog.
I often have an encounter scheme set up and monsters I can use, but then will adjust depending on how it's going to keep it fun for everyone. Too easy isn't fun, and TPKs usually aren't fun, either.
I also try and make it more than just Kill Everyone. Resolutions outside combat can be an option, 'games' within the combat (prevent the door from closing, hold the passage until reinforcements arrive, etc.), and environmental considerations can also make the combat more interesting. You can read up some interesting cinematic combat ideas here.
Resource management and you
What this ultimately comes down is what type of game you and your table want to play. A big part of D&D is resource management and the encounter system is a major contributor to the expenditure of those resources.
How you want to manage and challenge your party is very much going to be up to you. But that doesn't mean that this is opinion-based as there are many factors and options to consider.
Time is a limiting factor
The first thing to consider when planning is how much time you have. You've stated that your sessions are 6-8 hours and that you'd like opportunity for both roleplay and combat.
My own experience has shown that for parties of 6, you can usually get 2-3 extended combats and a roleplay opportunity within that time. The larger the group, the more time combat will likely take as you have each players turns to consider and the time they'll take.
Time may also be a consideration in-game as well. If you're only able to do 2-4 total encounters per session, it may take 2-3 sessions (or more) in order to be able to have a long rest and refresh the resources. If your players understand and are on board with that, then you can work with that - but it does mean they'll have to wait in order to get that long rest.
Encounter volume and difficulty
One thing I've noticed is that "easier" encounters tend to not tax resources at all. You are effectively trading session-time for an encounter that may not drain any actual resources. That's not a bad thing, but it's something to consider. If the point of encounters is resource management, but they're avoiding the use of resources because the encounter was simple, then you've mostly just lost time in session for something that hasn't made an impact on their resource planning.
This doesn't mean you should go the other way and do the 15 minute adventuring day and have a single very difficult and extended battle, but it's something I've considered in my planning.
It's also important to consider that the recommended 6-8 isn't limited to combat encounters, but encounters in general. Chapter 3 of the DMG covers a lot of this and lists sample encounters that cover both RP, Combat, and a mix.
Challenge and on the fly planning
What I tend to do is build fights that are very difficult according to Kobold Fight Club, and see how they go with the players. C0nsider the in-game time and see how things pan out with the battles. You can add combat to the adventuring day or postpone them based on your players resources.
Playing your monsters
It's also important to consider the intelligence, planning, and in-combat response that your monsters will have. Intelligent monsters played intelligently are going to be very difficult and present more problems for your players to solve. Don't be afraid to swing hard - you can always back off or present/accept opportunities for your players to do creative things.
Rests
For rests, I do follow the 1 Long Rest/day requirement. If they use a lot of resources first thing in the morning, then that's something they'll need to deal with throughout the day.
For Short Rests, I'll allow their use as long as it makes sense in-game. Wanting to rest after every fight could be a thing, but that's why there are generally other in-game things going on that suggest expediency is a thing so that they don't dawdle. Taking that hour could happen, but then they may miss out on completing the larger mission, meeting an important NPC, etc.
My planning style
I generally plan for about 2-3 very difficult combats per adventuring day along with 1-2 roleplay opportunities. This seems to allow for challenging fights and fun roleplay within a session and not make the players feel like they're waiting forever for a resource refresh - or that the fights are so simple to not require resources and just an easy slog.
I often have an encounter scheme set up and monsters I can use, but then will adjust depending on how it's going to keep it fun for everyone. Too easy isn't fun, and TPKs usually aren't fun, either.
I also try and make it more than just Kill Everyone. Resolutions outside combat can be an option, 'games' within the combat (prevent the door from closing, hold the passage until reinforcements arrive, etc.), and environmental considerations can also make the combat more interesting. You can read up some interesting cinematic combat ideas here.
edited Nov 26 at 19:13
answered Nov 26 at 17:52
NautArch
51.7k7180349
51.7k7180349
1
While I appreciate the quick acceptance, and it's very much up to you when you want to accept an answer, you may get other answers that you like better or end being more useful. I typically wait about a day before accepting, but that's not a standard nor is it a requirement. You do you and welcome to the site!
– NautArch
Nov 26 at 18:04
Wow thanks for the very detailed description. I'll reduce the amount of encounters and keep the difficulity.
– Kyllion
Nov 26 at 18:08
@Kyllion You'll definitely learn as you move forward, too. Don't be afraid to adjust the encounters on the fly as well and improvise. I often have an encounter scheme set up and monsters I can use, but then will adjust depending on how it's going to keep it fun for everyone. Too easy isn't fun, and TPKs usually aren't fun, either.
– NautArch
Nov 26 at 18:12
Oh okay, I chose your answer because I found it very useful and it answered my question with some great tips and advice. I did not expect to get an answer that would be 'better' to be honest. I've had different experiences with sites like this one, so I was rather suprised haha
– Kyllion
Nov 26 at 18:14
1
@illustro Yah - I added a bit referencing Chapter 3 of the DMG to the Encounter Volume section.
– NautArch
Nov 26 at 19:21
|
show 5 more comments
1
While I appreciate the quick acceptance, and it's very much up to you when you want to accept an answer, you may get other answers that you like better or end being more useful. I typically wait about a day before accepting, but that's not a standard nor is it a requirement. You do you and welcome to the site!
– NautArch
Nov 26 at 18:04
Wow thanks for the very detailed description. I'll reduce the amount of encounters and keep the difficulity.
– Kyllion
Nov 26 at 18:08
@Kyllion You'll definitely learn as you move forward, too. Don't be afraid to adjust the encounters on the fly as well and improvise. I often have an encounter scheme set up and monsters I can use, but then will adjust depending on how it's going to keep it fun for everyone. Too easy isn't fun, and TPKs usually aren't fun, either.
– NautArch
Nov 26 at 18:12
Oh okay, I chose your answer because I found it very useful and it answered my question with some great tips and advice. I did not expect to get an answer that would be 'better' to be honest. I've had different experiences with sites like this one, so I was rather suprised haha
– Kyllion
Nov 26 at 18:14
1
@illustro Yah - I added a bit referencing Chapter 3 of the DMG to the Encounter Volume section.
– NautArch
Nov 26 at 19:21
1
1
While I appreciate the quick acceptance, and it's very much up to you when you want to accept an answer, you may get other answers that you like better or end being more useful. I typically wait about a day before accepting, but that's not a standard nor is it a requirement. You do you and welcome to the site!
– NautArch
Nov 26 at 18:04
While I appreciate the quick acceptance, and it's very much up to you when you want to accept an answer, you may get other answers that you like better or end being more useful. I typically wait about a day before accepting, but that's not a standard nor is it a requirement. You do you and welcome to the site!
– NautArch
Nov 26 at 18:04
Wow thanks for the very detailed description. I'll reduce the amount of encounters and keep the difficulity.
– Kyllion
Nov 26 at 18:08
Wow thanks for the very detailed description. I'll reduce the amount of encounters and keep the difficulity.
– Kyllion
Nov 26 at 18:08
@Kyllion You'll definitely learn as you move forward, too. Don't be afraid to adjust the encounters on the fly as well and improvise. I often have an encounter scheme set up and monsters I can use, but then will adjust depending on how it's going to keep it fun for everyone. Too easy isn't fun, and TPKs usually aren't fun, either.
– NautArch
Nov 26 at 18:12
@Kyllion You'll definitely learn as you move forward, too. Don't be afraid to adjust the encounters on the fly as well and improvise. I often have an encounter scheme set up and monsters I can use, but then will adjust depending on how it's going to keep it fun for everyone. Too easy isn't fun, and TPKs usually aren't fun, either.
– NautArch
Nov 26 at 18:12
Oh okay, I chose your answer because I found it very useful and it answered my question with some great tips and advice. I did not expect to get an answer that would be 'better' to be honest. I've had different experiences with sites like this one, so I was rather suprised haha
– Kyllion
Nov 26 at 18:14
Oh okay, I chose your answer because I found it very useful and it answered my question with some great tips and advice. I did not expect to get an answer that would be 'better' to be honest. I've had different experiences with sites like this one, so I was rather suprised haha
– Kyllion
Nov 26 at 18:14
1
1
@illustro Yah - I added a bit referencing Chapter 3 of the DMG to the Encounter Volume section.
– NautArch
Nov 26 at 19:21
@illustro Yah - I added a bit referencing Chapter 3 of the DMG to the Encounter Volume section.
– NautArch
Nov 26 at 19:21
|
show 5 more comments
Are you willing to accept an answer that does not include a long rest? Are you familiar with the XP per Adventure Day Budget in the Basic Rules?
– KorvinStarmast
Nov 26 at 16:38
I meant how many encounters for one adventuring day, sorry for the unclarity. Also there does not have to be a long rest but I know my players will probaply ask for one as soon as their abilities start running out.
– Kyllion
Nov 26 at 16:54
My sessions range from 6 to 8 hours.
– Kyllion
Nov 26 at 16:56