Adventure hook: Difference between revisions
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* A job offer. "The [[Local Lord]] is offering a bounty for finding his nephew." | * A job offer. "The [[Local Lord]] is offering a bounty for finding his nephew." | ||
* Politics. "Somebody is pressuring the City Guard to pressure you to leave town." | * Politics. "Somebody is pressuring the City Guard to pressure you to leave town." | ||
* Blockade. "[[ | * Blockade. "[[Bandit]]s are blocking the road." | ||
Many other possibilities exist. | Many other possibilities exist. |
Revision as of 00:17, 28 October 2022
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How a DM usually gets an adventure to start. So called because the party is expected to "bite" on the hook, and get pulled in. Railroading DMs usually make their hooks unavoidable.
There are a few general possibilities for plot hooks:
- Tavern: "You All Meet in a Tavern..." Old Reliable. The Tavern is both a hook and location, and some homebrewers make it the starting point for different plotlines. Usually used in combination with one of the below.
- Strange events that need investigating. e.g. "People are saying a star fell last night into the lake."
- A mysterious NPC. "A dark, cloaked stranger is hanging around the inn, and the innkeeper asks the party to get him to leave, since his offputting smell is disturbing the other patrons."
- You get caught up in events. "Orcs attack the village you're in!"
- A job offer. "The Local Lord is offering a bounty for finding his nephew."
- Politics. "Somebody is pressuring the City Guard to pressure you to leave town."
- Blockade. "Bandits are blocking the road."
Many other possibilities exist.