How can I make conversations with NPCs more succinct?
up vote
22
down vote
favorite
IMPORTANT: don't just read the selected answer, all of the answers to this question provide good techniques to apply in different scenarios when it comes to conversations with NPCs. I chose the one which I think solve my own problem the best.
I tend to run mini sandbox adventures in which PCs are free to go around and interact with NPCs, locations, other PCs, etc. It seems to work for most of my players but one or two have complained that the whole process seems too meandering, especially that conversations with NPCs seem to take very long to resolve.
Before I ask how to make NPCs' conversations more succinct, I want to lay out some of my assumptions / resolutions:
- I like to make interesting NPCs so I tend to role play them out extensively. Major NPCs all have personalities, quirks and minor NPCs at least speak in character all the time
- I assume that I'll continue to play this mini-sandbox format for a while. Granted that changing the format might solve the problem but I will ask that as a separate question when the time comes
- I have already addressed some of the issues, which was that certain PCs tend to use a video-game approach and "exhaust" the NPC's dialogue on every possible topic. I told them to trust me as the GM that if I know what they're looking for, I'll weave it in and make it obvious in the narrative what they should do rather than present them with 100 doors and ask them to knock on all of them.
- I have also suspected that those players who had a problem didn't feel like they could contribute to the conversation and just sat there observing most of the time. My plan is to address this problem at its root (is this a character building problem, a player participation problem, etc.) but meanwhile, I am thinking of a rotation system during conversation.
With all of that said, what else can I do to make conversations with NPCs more succinct?
gm-techniques system-agnostic npc
add a comment |
up vote
22
down vote
favorite
IMPORTANT: don't just read the selected answer, all of the answers to this question provide good techniques to apply in different scenarios when it comes to conversations with NPCs. I chose the one which I think solve my own problem the best.
I tend to run mini sandbox adventures in which PCs are free to go around and interact with NPCs, locations, other PCs, etc. It seems to work for most of my players but one or two have complained that the whole process seems too meandering, especially that conversations with NPCs seem to take very long to resolve.
Before I ask how to make NPCs' conversations more succinct, I want to lay out some of my assumptions / resolutions:
- I like to make interesting NPCs so I tend to role play them out extensively. Major NPCs all have personalities, quirks and minor NPCs at least speak in character all the time
- I assume that I'll continue to play this mini-sandbox format for a while. Granted that changing the format might solve the problem but I will ask that as a separate question when the time comes
- I have already addressed some of the issues, which was that certain PCs tend to use a video-game approach and "exhaust" the NPC's dialogue on every possible topic. I told them to trust me as the GM that if I know what they're looking for, I'll weave it in and make it obvious in the narrative what they should do rather than present them with 100 doors and ask them to knock on all of them.
- I have also suspected that those players who had a problem didn't feel like they could contribute to the conversation and just sat there observing most of the time. My plan is to address this problem at its root (is this a character building problem, a player participation problem, etc.) but meanwhile, I am thinking of a rotation system during conversation.
With all of that said, what else can I do to make conversations with NPCs more succinct?
gm-techniques system-agnostic npc
3
As a Q&A site we're not built to handle advice seeking questions. Those sorts of question are generally better suited for a forum. We have a curated list of recommended forums here if you'd like to check that out. It should be a simple matter to change this into a question that is handled by this site though if you change the question to ask how (ie. "how can I make NPCs conversations more succinct") instead of just asking for advice.
– Purple Monkey
Nov 28 at 4:47
2
Thanks for the feedback. I have made the change
– broselovestar
Nov 28 at 4:51
1
nuklearpower.com/2001/04/12/…
– Renan
Nov 29 at 1:35
add a comment |
up vote
22
down vote
favorite
up vote
22
down vote
favorite
IMPORTANT: don't just read the selected answer, all of the answers to this question provide good techniques to apply in different scenarios when it comes to conversations with NPCs. I chose the one which I think solve my own problem the best.
I tend to run mini sandbox adventures in which PCs are free to go around and interact with NPCs, locations, other PCs, etc. It seems to work for most of my players but one or two have complained that the whole process seems too meandering, especially that conversations with NPCs seem to take very long to resolve.
Before I ask how to make NPCs' conversations more succinct, I want to lay out some of my assumptions / resolutions:
- I like to make interesting NPCs so I tend to role play them out extensively. Major NPCs all have personalities, quirks and minor NPCs at least speak in character all the time
- I assume that I'll continue to play this mini-sandbox format for a while. Granted that changing the format might solve the problem but I will ask that as a separate question when the time comes
- I have already addressed some of the issues, which was that certain PCs tend to use a video-game approach and "exhaust" the NPC's dialogue on every possible topic. I told them to trust me as the GM that if I know what they're looking for, I'll weave it in and make it obvious in the narrative what they should do rather than present them with 100 doors and ask them to knock on all of them.
- I have also suspected that those players who had a problem didn't feel like they could contribute to the conversation and just sat there observing most of the time. My plan is to address this problem at its root (is this a character building problem, a player participation problem, etc.) but meanwhile, I am thinking of a rotation system during conversation.
With all of that said, what else can I do to make conversations with NPCs more succinct?
gm-techniques system-agnostic npc
IMPORTANT: don't just read the selected answer, all of the answers to this question provide good techniques to apply in different scenarios when it comes to conversations with NPCs. I chose the one which I think solve my own problem the best.
I tend to run mini sandbox adventures in which PCs are free to go around and interact with NPCs, locations, other PCs, etc. It seems to work for most of my players but one or two have complained that the whole process seems too meandering, especially that conversations with NPCs seem to take very long to resolve.
Before I ask how to make NPCs' conversations more succinct, I want to lay out some of my assumptions / resolutions:
- I like to make interesting NPCs so I tend to role play them out extensively. Major NPCs all have personalities, quirks and minor NPCs at least speak in character all the time
- I assume that I'll continue to play this mini-sandbox format for a while. Granted that changing the format might solve the problem but I will ask that as a separate question when the time comes
- I have already addressed some of the issues, which was that certain PCs tend to use a video-game approach and "exhaust" the NPC's dialogue on every possible topic. I told them to trust me as the GM that if I know what they're looking for, I'll weave it in and make it obvious in the narrative what they should do rather than present them with 100 doors and ask them to knock on all of them.
- I have also suspected that those players who had a problem didn't feel like they could contribute to the conversation and just sat there observing most of the time. My plan is to address this problem at its root (is this a character building problem, a player participation problem, etc.) but meanwhile, I am thinking of a rotation system during conversation.
With all of that said, what else can I do to make conversations with NPCs more succinct?
gm-techniques system-agnostic npc
gm-techniques system-agnostic npc
edited Nov 29 at 13:51
KorvinStarmast
73.4k17228402
73.4k17228402
asked Nov 28 at 4:37
broselovestar
13516
13516
3
As a Q&A site we're not built to handle advice seeking questions. Those sorts of question are generally better suited for a forum. We have a curated list of recommended forums here if you'd like to check that out. It should be a simple matter to change this into a question that is handled by this site though if you change the question to ask how (ie. "how can I make NPCs conversations more succinct") instead of just asking for advice.
– Purple Monkey
Nov 28 at 4:47
2
Thanks for the feedback. I have made the change
– broselovestar
Nov 28 at 4:51
1
nuklearpower.com/2001/04/12/…
– Renan
Nov 29 at 1:35
add a comment |
3
As a Q&A site we're not built to handle advice seeking questions. Those sorts of question are generally better suited for a forum. We have a curated list of recommended forums here if you'd like to check that out. It should be a simple matter to change this into a question that is handled by this site though if you change the question to ask how (ie. "how can I make NPCs conversations more succinct") instead of just asking for advice.
– Purple Monkey
Nov 28 at 4:47
2
Thanks for the feedback. I have made the change
– broselovestar
Nov 28 at 4:51
1
nuklearpower.com/2001/04/12/…
– Renan
Nov 29 at 1:35
3
3
As a Q&A site we're not built to handle advice seeking questions. Those sorts of question are generally better suited for a forum. We have a curated list of recommended forums here if you'd like to check that out. It should be a simple matter to change this into a question that is handled by this site though if you change the question to ask how (ie. "how can I make NPCs conversations more succinct") instead of just asking for advice.
– Purple Monkey
Nov 28 at 4:47
As a Q&A site we're not built to handle advice seeking questions. Those sorts of question are generally better suited for a forum. We have a curated list of recommended forums here if you'd like to check that out. It should be a simple matter to change this into a question that is handled by this site though if you change the question to ask how (ie. "how can I make NPCs conversations more succinct") instead of just asking for advice.
– Purple Monkey
Nov 28 at 4:47
2
2
Thanks for the feedback. I have made the change
– broselovestar
Nov 28 at 4:51
Thanks for the feedback. I have made the change
– broselovestar
Nov 28 at 4:51
1
1
nuklearpower.com/2001/04/12/…
– Renan
Nov 29 at 1:35
nuklearpower.com/2001/04/12/…
– Renan
Nov 29 at 1:35
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
up vote
43
down vote
accepted
Handwave and summarise the boring stuff
I have struggled with a similar problem. I like to make my world immersive and give distinct characteristics to every NPC my group encounters. However it can lead to the players talking to an NPC for 10 minutes to purchase a meal.
As long as everyone is having fun this isn't a problem. However as you have pointed out some players can get bored of the extended dialogue. So what I tend to do is role play the first encounter with an NPC. Give the tavern keeper a personality when they first enter. Once the character is established however I won't play out the scene unless the players are trying to do something interesting with the conversation. Instead I simply state "you go a buy a meal from the bar, she charges you 3cp".
If the conversation is going to be mundane don't bother playing it out entirely. Keep your deep dialogue and extended scenes for the important stuff. This has the added bonus of reducing the number of distinct characters you need play/remember.
When the important information runs out
If a conversation starts out important and you want to play it at the table you can still use some similar techniques.
Mid-conversation should the PCs have gathered all the important information from the NPC simply tell them:
"You spend another 15 minutes talking to the sailor but learn nothing else interesting, except that he has a tattoo of a mermaid in a place he won't show you."
When talking to a powerful NPC, a Lord or ruler of some kind you can say things like:
"The King appears visibly frustrated by your continued questions, you recognise you only have one or two more before he tells you to leave"
If they don't take the hint to wrap it up, or this is too aggressive, remember that NPCs are people too and probably have other things to do.
"I'm afraid I have to go, never enough hours in the day for all the things I have to do"
Then have the NPC simply leave.
You also have the option to have another NPC interrupt them. If the NPC is a shop keeper they will have other customers, peasants will have children or friends, even the guard could show up to accuse them of loitering.
What about when the NPC has no reason end the conversation?
Sometimes you will find yourself in a situation where none of the above techniques will be logical. The hermit in the swamp who has nothing but time to talk to adventurers for example. In these situations you can take the opposite approach, bore the characters into ending it themselves.
PC: "How long have you been here?"
Hermit: "Well I first arrived on a moonswept night... the swamp was beautiful..."
DM: The Hermit launches into a 20 minute description of his arrival to the swamp.
PC: "But how long ago?"
Hermit: begins the same story...
With this approach you need to make the passage of time clear. The PCs are burning daylight talking to the NPC. This means they might not have time to get to that important MacGuffin tonight.
How to tell when to handwave
You mentioned in a comment on another answer this was something you were struggling with, I'll attempt to provide some advice.
From the GM side its pretty easy, if the party has gathered all the information you intend to give them then it's safe to handwave. Though you should be careful not to handwave away conversations that are entertaining and the entire table is invested in.
For example I had a very Australian NPC (I'm Australian too and I slipped with my accent when introducing the NPC) that the party thought was hilarious. His entire point was to give them directions to the important location in town. However I let the players continue talking to him until I ran out of Australian jokes at which point I had him leave to return to work.
The harder part is when you know there is still information to gather but the players have begun checking out of the conversation. It is hard to give advice for this as it will vary from group to group but some things to watch for are: players leaning back on their chair, players not joining in the conversation, phones or other distraction being looked at, and a reduction in the role playing effort.
At this point you can reduce the conversation to a dice roll. Have them role a social check and base the DC on how well the conversation has been going. On a success you give them all the important information in the handwaved summary. On a fail they may only get some or even none of it.
Summary
You want to use GM fiat and handwaving to indicate that the conversation continued but that they had all the important information. The players should trust that you have given them everything they could have gotten through continued conversation.
1
I like the specific example you give in the last paragraph. I have tried some of these methods before, especially skipping over the non-important NPCs altogther. Yet some players still found the important, main NPCs conversations too long. Any specific advise for this (beside your last paragraph which is really useful)
– broselovestar
Nov 28 at 5:12
1
@broselovestar I added a few more examples and expanded on that section. If these something you want a specific example for let me know.
– linksassin
Nov 28 at 5:39
3
Thog the Barbarian says talky man talking is all boring stuff :)
– KorvinStarmast
Nov 29 at 14:00
@KorvinStarmast That is extremely accurate. I'm always having my Barbarian walk out on conversations
– linksassin
Nov 29 at 23:38
add a comment |
up vote
12
down vote
Have the NPCs break off the conversation when the point of diminishing returns has been reached.
This could be when you, as the GM, know that the most pertinent information has been delivered. Or, it could be when you notice that other players are become bored and disengaging.
Make only NPCs that are important interesting.
You could make other background NPCs just sort of melt into the background, thus signalling that they are not important.
Give the waiting characters something else to do.
This is a little harder to pull off, but if you give them something else to do and rotate the action to them for a few minutes, they will not be as bored, but will be left in suspense as the conversation continues, waiting their turn.
For example:
Super Interesting NPC: "Welcome Adventurers! Long have I waited..."
Bored PC: stares out the window, bored as hell, fingering their Battle Axe
GM: (After the dialogue continues for a bit) So, Bored PC, what are you doing while the Super Interesting NPC talks to So-and-So?
Bored PC: Guess I just stare out the window.
GM: "OK, after a few minutes, you see a stumbling-drunk dwarf come walking out of the Inn across the street. Shortly after, a pair of shady-looking humans exit the Inn and follow him down the dark alley..."
At this point, the Bored PC has some decisions to make and could even get some action in, if they want. The whole encounter could just be a quick couple of dice rolls, but it provides opportunity for them to become engaged in the game and might even trick them into interacting with an NPC!
Regarding the problem of delivering information...
Players can only absorb so much plot info before they are "full"
The plot that you have spent hours coming up with and going over in your mind is not going to be very clear to your players. They will need a painful amount of time to take it in and might never catch onto some of your plot elements.
If you feel that your players are bored, but there is more important information that they need, consider putting off that info until after next battle.
Give them some time to digest what they have discovered so far, then have the NPC show back up or even have another NPC deliver the required information.
I like your approaches but perhaps an example of how to detect when the conversation is still useful but has become disengaging for some players? As a side note, I already skip over unimportant NPCs conversation 90% of the time. Some of my players still complained about the main NPCs extended dialogue. Any extra advice on this?
– broselovestar
Nov 28 at 5:16
@broselovestar added some examples regarding shifting the focus during long conversations. Hope that helps
– Destruktor
Nov 28 at 5:42
@Destruktor I love your example for engaging a single bored player. What about when the entire party is bored but theres still important information to gather?
– linksassin
Nov 28 at 5:51
@linksassin added some more info on that topic, basically saying that once the PC's brains are full, give them a break and circle back on the topic later
– Destruktor
Nov 28 at 6:02
2
I particularly appreciate that engaging a waiting player in this way establishes time as a resource to be managed. The person engaging with the NPC is choosing to spend their time gathering information, making connections, etc. That means that they don't get to be doing other things that might come up. If the asker is having issues with players feeling like they are "supposed" to exhaust all dialog options, then this would likely help drive home that talking is one option out of a set instead of an expected chore.
– A Measure of Diplomacy
Nov 28 at 15:08
|
show 2 more comments
up vote
2
down vote
I suggest that what you need is an "Early Out".
Essentially at most stages of conversation provide your players the opportunity to ask for more info or to explicitly finish the conversation.
You may also need to be more ruthless in deciding when the NPCs are talking too much in your scripts.
When you write the dialog, have a clear goal and a clear set of information the players need to know, and tell them very little else. Dress it up a little in purple prose and characterful tics, but don't go off on a historical tangent or suchlike unless you're confident the players are in the right mood and are of the right mindset to enjoy that.
As a DM, your first and foremost goal is to facilitate the players and arbitrate their actions, telling the story is their job.
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
43
down vote
accepted
Handwave and summarise the boring stuff
I have struggled with a similar problem. I like to make my world immersive and give distinct characteristics to every NPC my group encounters. However it can lead to the players talking to an NPC for 10 minutes to purchase a meal.
As long as everyone is having fun this isn't a problem. However as you have pointed out some players can get bored of the extended dialogue. So what I tend to do is role play the first encounter with an NPC. Give the tavern keeper a personality when they first enter. Once the character is established however I won't play out the scene unless the players are trying to do something interesting with the conversation. Instead I simply state "you go a buy a meal from the bar, she charges you 3cp".
If the conversation is going to be mundane don't bother playing it out entirely. Keep your deep dialogue and extended scenes for the important stuff. This has the added bonus of reducing the number of distinct characters you need play/remember.
When the important information runs out
If a conversation starts out important and you want to play it at the table you can still use some similar techniques.
Mid-conversation should the PCs have gathered all the important information from the NPC simply tell them:
"You spend another 15 minutes talking to the sailor but learn nothing else interesting, except that he has a tattoo of a mermaid in a place he won't show you."
When talking to a powerful NPC, a Lord or ruler of some kind you can say things like:
"The King appears visibly frustrated by your continued questions, you recognise you only have one or two more before he tells you to leave"
If they don't take the hint to wrap it up, or this is too aggressive, remember that NPCs are people too and probably have other things to do.
"I'm afraid I have to go, never enough hours in the day for all the things I have to do"
Then have the NPC simply leave.
You also have the option to have another NPC interrupt them. If the NPC is a shop keeper they will have other customers, peasants will have children or friends, even the guard could show up to accuse them of loitering.
What about when the NPC has no reason end the conversation?
Sometimes you will find yourself in a situation where none of the above techniques will be logical. The hermit in the swamp who has nothing but time to talk to adventurers for example. In these situations you can take the opposite approach, bore the characters into ending it themselves.
PC: "How long have you been here?"
Hermit: "Well I first arrived on a moonswept night... the swamp was beautiful..."
DM: The Hermit launches into a 20 minute description of his arrival to the swamp.
PC: "But how long ago?"
Hermit: begins the same story...
With this approach you need to make the passage of time clear. The PCs are burning daylight talking to the NPC. This means they might not have time to get to that important MacGuffin tonight.
How to tell when to handwave
You mentioned in a comment on another answer this was something you were struggling with, I'll attempt to provide some advice.
From the GM side its pretty easy, if the party has gathered all the information you intend to give them then it's safe to handwave. Though you should be careful not to handwave away conversations that are entertaining and the entire table is invested in.
For example I had a very Australian NPC (I'm Australian too and I slipped with my accent when introducing the NPC) that the party thought was hilarious. His entire point was to give them directions to the important location in town. However I let the players continue talking to him until I ran out of Australian jokes at which point I had him leave to return to work.
The harder part is when you know there is still information to gather but the players have begun checking out of the conversation. It is hard to give advice for this as it will vary from group to group but some things to watch for are: players leaning back on their chair, players not joining in the conversation, phones or other distraction being looked at, and a reduction in the role playing effort.
At this point you can reduce the conversation to a dice roll. Have them role a social check and base the DC on how well the conversation has been going. On a success you give them all the important information in the handwaved summary. On a fail they may only get some or even none of it.
Summary
You want to use GM fiat and handwaving to indicate that the conversation continued but that they had all the important information. The players should trust that you have given them everything they could have gotten through continued conversation.
1
I like the specific example you give in the last paragraph. I have tried some of these methods before, especially skipping over the non-important NPCs altogther. Yet some players still found the important, main NPCs conversations too long. Any specific advise for this (beside your last paragraph which is really useful)
– broselovestar
Nov 28 at 5:12
1
@broselovestar I added a few more examples and expanded on that section. If these something you want a specific example for let me know.
– linksassin
Nov 28 at 5:39
3
Thog the Barbarian says talky man talking is all boring stuff :)
– KorvinStarmast
Nov 29 at 14:00
@KorvinStarmast That is extremely accurate. I'm always having my Barbarian walk out on conversations
– linksassin
Nov 29 at 23:38
add a comment |
up vote
43
down vote
accepted
Handwave and summarise the boring stuff
I have struggled with a similar problem. I like to make my world immersive and give distinct characteristics to every NPC my group encounters. However it can lead to the players talking to an NPC for 10 minutes to purchase a meal.
As long as everyone is having fun this isn't a problem. However as you have pointed out some players can get bored of the extended dialogue. So what I tend to do is role play the first encounter with an NPC. Give the tavern keeper a personality when they first enter. Once the character is established however I won't play out the scene unless the players are trying to do something interesting with the conversation. Instead I simply state "you go a buy a meal from the bar, she charges you 3cp".
If the conversation is going to be mundane don't bother playing it out entirely. Keep your deep dialogue and extended scenes for the important stuff. This has the added bonus of reducing the number of distinct characters you need play/remember.
When the important information runs out
If a conversation starts out important and you want to play it at the table you can still use some similar techniques.
Mid-conversation should the PCs have gathered all the important information from the NPC simply tell them:
"You spend another 15 minutes talking to the sailor but learn nothing else interesting, except that he has a tattoo of a mermaid in a place he won't show you."
When talking to a powerful NPC, a Lord or ruler of some kind you can say things like:
"The King appears visibly frustrated by your continued questions, you recognise you only have one or two more before he tells you to leave"
If they don't take the hint to wrap it up, or this is too aggressive, remember that NPCs are people too and probably have other things to do.
"I'm afraid I have to go, never enough hours in the day for all the things I have to do"
Then have the NPC simply leave.
You also have the option to have another NPC interrupt them. If the NPC is a shop keeper they will have other customers, peasants will have children or friends, even the guard could show up to accuse them of loitering.
What about when the NPC has no reason end the conversation?
Sometimes you will find yourself in a situation where none of the above techniques will be logical. The hermit in the swamp who has nothing but time to talk to adventurers for example. In these situations you can take the opposite approach, bore the characters into ending it themselves.
PC: "How long have you been here?"
Hermit: "Well I first arrived on a moonswept night... the swamp was beautiful..."
DM: The Hermit launches into a 20 minute description of his arrival to the swamp.
PC: "But how long ago?"
Hermit: begins the same story...
With this approach you need to make the passage of time clear. The PCs are burning daylight talking to the NPC. This means they might not have time to get to that important MacGuffin tonight.
How to tell when to handwave
You mentioned in a comment on another answer this was something you were struggling with, I'll attempt to provide some advice.
From the GM side its pretty easy, if the party has gathered all the information you intend to give them then it's safe to handwave. Though you should be careful not to handwave away conversations that are entertaining and the entire table is invested in.
For example I had a very Australian NPC (I'm Australian too and I slipped with my accent when introducing the NPC) that the party thought was hilarious. His entire point was to give them directions to the important location in town. However I let the players continue talking to him until I ran out of Australian jokes at which point I had him leave to return to work.
The harder part is when you know there is still information to gather but the players have begun checking out of the conversation. It is hard to give advice for this as it will vary from group to group but some things to watch for are: players leaning back on their chair, players not joining in the conversation, phones or other distraction being looked at, and a reduction in the role playing effort.
At this point you can reduce the conversation to a dice roll. Have them role a social check and base the DC on how well the conversation has been going. On a success you give them all the important information in the handwaved summary. On a fail they may only get some or even none of it.
Summary
You want to use GM fiat and handwaving to indicate that the conversation continued but that they had all the important information. The players should trust that you have given them everything they could have gotten through continued conversation.
1
I like the specific example you give in the last paragraph. I have tried some of these methods before, especially skipping over the non-important NPCs altogther. Yet some players still found the important, main NPCs conversations too long. Any specific advise for this (beside your last paragraph which is really useful)
– broselovestar
Nov 28 at 5:12
1
@broselovestar I added a few more examples and expanded on that section. If these something you want a specific example for let me know.
– linksassin
Nov 28 at 5:39
3
Thog the Barbarian says talky man talking is all boring stuff :)
– KorvinStarmast
Nov 29 at 14:00
@KorvinStarmast That is extremely accurate. I'm always having my Barbarian walk out on conversations
– linksassin
Nov 29 at 23:38
add a comment |
up vote
43
down vote
accepted
up vote
43
down vote
accepted
Handwave and summarise the boring stuff
I have struggled with a similar problem. I like to make my world immersive and give distinct characteristics to every NPC my group encounters. However it can lead to the players talking to an NPC for 10 minutes to purchase a meal.
As long as everyone is having fun this isn't a problem. However as you have pointed out some players can get bored of the extended dialogue. So what I tend to do is role play the first encounter with an NPC. Give the tavern keeper a personality when they first enter. Once the character is established however I won't play out the scene unless the players are trying to do something interesting with the conversation. Instead I simply state "you go a buy a meal from the bar, she charges you 3cp".
If the conversation is going to be mundane don't bother playing it out entirely. Keep your deep dialogue and extended scenes for the important stuff. This has the added bonus of reducing the number of distinct characters you need play/remember.
When the important information runs out
If a conversation starts out important and you want to play it at the table you can still use some similar techniques.
Mid-conversation should the PCs have gathered all the important information from the NPC simply tell them:
"You spend another 15 minutes talking to the sailor but learn nothing else interesting, except that he has a tattoo of a mermaid in a place he won't show you."
When talking to a powerful NPC, a Lord or ruler of some kind you can say things like:
"The King appears visibly frustrated by your continued questions, you recognise you only have one or two more before he tells you to leave"
If they don't take the hint to wrap it up, or this is too aggressive, remember that NPCs are people too and probably have other things to do.
"I'm afraid I have to go, never enough hours in the day for all the things I have to do"
Then have the NPC simply leave.
You also have the option to have another NPC interrupt them. If the NPC is a shop keeper they will have other customers, peasants will have children or friends, even the guard could show up to accuse them of loitering.
What about when the NPC has no reason end the conversation?
Sometimes you will find yourself in a situation where none of the above techniques will be logical. The hermit in the swamp who has nothing but time to talk to adventurers for example. In these situations you can take the opposite approach, bore the characters into ending it themselves.
PC: "How long have you been here?"
Hermit: "Well I first arrived on a moonswept night... the swamp was beautiful..."
DM: The Hermit launches into a 20 minute description of his arrival to the swamp.
PC: "But how long ago?"
Hermit: begins the same story...
With this approach you need to make the passage of time clear. The PCs are burning daylight talking to the NPC. This means they might not have time to get to that important MacGuffin tonight.
How to tell when to handwave
You mentioned in a comment on another answer this was something you were struggling with, I'll attempt to provide some advice.
From the GM side its pretty easy, if the party has gathered all the information you intend to give them then it's safe to handwave. Though you should be careful not to handwave away conversations that are entertaining and the entire table is invested in.
For example I had a very Australian NPC (I'm Australian too and I slipped with my accent when introducing the NPC) that the party thought was hilarious. His entire point was to give them directions to the important location in town. However I let the players continue talking to him until I ran out of Australian jokes at which point I had him leave to return to work.
The harder part is when you know there is still information to gather but the players have begun checking out of the conversation. It is hard to give advice for this as it will vary from group to group but some things to watch for are: players leaning back on their chair, players not joining in the conversation, phones or other distraction being looked at, and a reduction in the role playing effort.
At this point you can reduce the conversation to a dice roll. Have them role a social check and base the DC on how well the conversation has been going. On a success you give them all the important information in the handwaved summary. On a fail they may only get some or even none of it.
Summary
You want to use GM fiat and handwaving to indicate that the conversation continued but that they had all the important information. The players should trust that you have given them everything they could have gotten through continued conversation.
Handwave and summarise the boring stuff
I have struggled with a similar problem. I like to make my world immersive and give distinct characteristics to every NPC my group encounters. However it can lead to the players talking to an NPC for 10 minutes to purchase a meal.
As long as everyone is having fun this isn't a problem. However as you have pointed out some players can get bored of the extended dialogue. So what I tend to do is role play the first encounter with an NPC. Give the tavern keeper a personality when they first enter. Once the character is established however I won't play out the scene unless the players are trying to do something interesting with the conversation. Instead I simply state "you go a buy a meal from the bar, she charges you 3cp".
If the conversation is going to be mundane don't bother playing it out entirely. Keep your deep dialogue and extended scenes for the important stuff. This has the added bonus of reducing the number of distinct characters you need play/remember.
When the important information runs out
If a conversation starts out important and you want to play it at the table you can still use some similar techniques.
Mid-conversation should the PCs have gathered all the important information from the NPC simply tell them:
"You spend another 15 minutes talking to the sailor but learn nothing else interesting, except that he has a tattoo of a mermaid in a place he won't show you."
When talking to a powerful NPC, a Lord or ruler of some kind you can say things like:
"The King appears visibly frustrated by your continued questions, you recognise you only have one or two more before he tells you to leave"
If they don't take the hint to wrap it up, or this is too aggressive, remember that NPCs are people too and probably have other things to do.
"I'm afraid I have to go, never enough hours in the day for all the things I have to do"
Then have the NPC simply leave.
You also have the option to have another NPC interrupt them. If the NPC is a shop keeper they will have other customers, peasants will have children or friends, even the guard could show up to accuse them of loitering.
What about when the NPC has no reason end the conversation?
Sometimes you will find yourself in a situation where none of the above techniques will be logical. The hermit in the swamp who has nothing but time to talk to adventurers for example. In these situations you can take the opposite approach, bore the characters into ending it themselves.
PC: "How long have you been here?"
Hermit: "Well I first arrived on a moonswept night... the swamp was beautiful..."
DM: The Hermit launches into a 20 minute description of his arrival to the swamp.
PC: "But how long ago?"
Hermit: begins the same story...
With this approach you need to make the passage of time clear. The PCs are burning daylight talking to the NPC. This means they might not have time to get to that important MacGuffin tonight.
How to tell when to handwave
You mentioned in a comment on another answer this was something you were struggling with, I'll attempt to provide some advice.
From the GM side its pretty easy, if the party has gathered all the information you intend to give them then it's safe to handwave. Though you should be careful not to handwave away conversations that are entertaining and the entire table is invested in.
For example I had a very Australian NPC (I'm Australian too and I slipped with my accent when introducing the NPC) that the party thought was hilarious. His entire point was to give them directions to the important location in town. However I let the players continue talking to him until I ran out of Australian jokes at which point I had him leave to return to work.
The harder part is when you know there is still information to gather but the players have begun checking out of the conversation. It is hard to give advice for this as it will vary from group to group but some things to watch for are: players leaning back on their chair, players not joining in the conversation, phones or other distraction being looked at, and a reduction in the role playing effort.
At this point you can reduce the conversation to a dice roll. Have them role a social check and base the DC on how well the conversation has been going. On a success you give them all the important information in the handwaved summary. On a fail they may only get some or even none of it.
Summary
You want to use GM fiat and handwaving to indicate that the conversation continued but that they had all the important information. The players should trust that you have given them everything they could have gotten through continued conversation.
edited Nov 28 at 15:37
NathanS
22.2k6104241
22.2k6104241
answered Nov 28 at 5:01
linksassin
4,31211244
4,31211244
1
I like the specific example you give in the last paragraph. I have tried some of these methods before, especially skipping over the non-important NPCs altogther. Yet some players still found the important, main NPCs conversations too long. Any specific advise for this (beside your last paragraph which is really useful)
– broselovestar
Nov 28 at 5:12
1
@broselovestar I added a few more examples and expanded on that section. If these something you want a specific example for let me know.
– linksassin
Nov 28 at 5:39
3
Thog the Barbarian says talky man talking is all boring stuff :)
– KorvinStarmast
Nov 29 at 14:00
@KorvinStarmast That is extremely accurate. I'm always having my Barbarian walk out on conversations
– linksassin
Nov 29 at 23:38
add a comment |
1
I like the specific example you give in the last paragraph. I have tried some of these methods before, especially skipping over the non-important NPCs altogther. Yet some players still found the important, main NPCs conversations too long. Any specific advise for this (beside your last paragraph which is really useful)
– broselovestar
Nov 28 at 5:12
1
@broselovestar I added a few more examples and expanded on that section. If these something you want a specific example for let me know.
– linksassin
Nov 28 at 5:39
3
Thog the Barbarian says talky man talking is all boring stuff :)
– KorvinStarmast
Nov 29 at 14:00
@KorvinStarmast That is extremely accurate. I'm always having my Barbarian walk out on conversations
– linksassin
Nov 29 at 23:38
1
1
I like the specific example you give in the last paragraph. I have tried some of these methods before, especially skipping over the non-important NPCs altogther. Yet some players still found the important, main NPCs conversations too long. Any specific advise for this (beside your last paragraph which is really useful)
– broselovestar
Nov 28 at 5:12
I like the specific example you give in the last paragraph. I have tried some of these methods before, especially skipping over the non-important NPCs altogther. Yet some players still found the important, main NPCs conversations too long. Any specific advise for this (beside your last paragraph which is really useful)
– broselovestar
Nov 28 at 5:12
1
1
@broselovestar I added a few more examples and expanded on that section. If these something you want a specific example for let me know.
– linksassin
Nov 28 at 5:39
@broselovestar I added a few more examples and expanded on that section. If these something you want a specific example for let me know.
– linksassin
Nov 28 at 5:39
3
3
Thog the Barbarian says talky man talking is all boring stuff :)
– KorvinStarmast
Nov 29 at 14:00
Thog the Barbarian says talky man talking is all boring stuff :)
– KorvinStarmast
Nov 29 at 14:00
@KorvinStarmast That is extremely accurate. I'm always having my Barbarian walk out on conversations
– linksassin
Nov 29 at 23:38
@KorvinStarmast That is extremely accurate. I'm always having my Barbarian walk out on conversations
– linksassin
Nov 29 at 23:38
add a comment |
up vote
12
down vote
Have the NPCs break off the conversation when the point of diminishing returns has been reached.
This could be when you, as the GM, know that the most pertinent information has been delivered. Or, it could be when you notice that other players are become bored and disengaging.
Make only NPCs that are important interesting.
You could make other background NPCs just sort of melt into the background, thus signalling that they are not important.
Give the waiting characters something else to do.
This is a little harder to pull off, but if you give them something else to do and rotate the action to them for a few minutes, they will not be as bored, but will be left in suspense as the conversation continues, waiting their turn.
For example:
Super Interesting NPC: "Welcome Adventurers! Long have I waited..."
Bored PC: stares out the window, bored as hell, fingering their Battle Axe
GM: (After the dialogue continues for a bit) So, Bored PC, what are you doing while the Super Interesting NPC talks to So-and-So?
Bored PC: Guess I just stare out the window.
GM: "OK, after a few minutes, you see a stumbling-drunk dwarf come walking out of the Inn across the street. Shortly after, a pair of shady-looking humans exit the Inn and follow him down the dark alley..."
At this point, the Bored PC has some decisions to make and could even get some action in, if they want. The whole encounter could just be a quick couple of dice rolls, but it provides opportunity for them to become engaged in the game and might even trick them into interacting with an NPC!
Regarding the problem of delivering information...
Players can only absorb so much plot info before they are "full"
The plot that you have spent hours coming up with and going over in your mind is not going to be very clear to your players. They will need a painful amount of time to take it in and might never catch onto some of your plot elements.
If you feel that your players are bored, but there is more important information that they need, consider putting off that info until after next battle.
Give them some time to digest what they have discovered so far, then have the NPC show back up or even have another NPC deliver the required information.
I like your approaches but perhaps an example of how to detect when the conversation is still useful but has become disengaging for some players? As a side note, I already skip over unimportant NPCs conversation 90% of the time. Some of my players still complained about the main NPCs extended dialogue. Any extra advice on this?
– broselovestar
Nov 28 at 5:16
@broselovestar added some examples regarding shifting the focus during long conversations. Hope that helps
– Destruktor
Nov 28 at 5:42
@Destruktor I love your example for engaging a single bored player. What about when the entire party is bored but theres still important information to gather?
– linksassin
Nov 28 at 5:51
@linksassin added some more info on that topic, basically saying that once the PC's brains are full, give them a break and circle back on the topic later
– Destruktor
Nov 28 at 6:02
2
I particularly appreciate that engaging a waiting player in this way establishes time as a resource to be managed. The person engaging with the NPC is choosing to spend their time gathering information, making connections, etc. That means that they don't get to be doing other things that might come up. If the asker is having issues with players feeling like they are "supposed" to exhaust all dialog options, then this would likely help drive home that talking is one option out of a set instead of an expected chore.
– A Measure of Diplomacy
Nov 28 at 15:08
|
show 2 more comments
up vote
12
down vote
Have the NPCs break off the conversation when the point of diminishing returns has been reached.
This could be when you, as the GM, know that the most pertinent information has been delivered. Or, it could be when you notice that other players are become bored and disengaging.
Make only NPCs that are important interesting.
You could make other background NPCs just sort of melt into the background, thus signalling that they are not important.
Give the waiting characters something else to do.
This is a little harder to pull off, but if you give them something else to do and rotate the action to them for a few minutes, they will not be as bored, but will be left in suspense as the conversation continues, waiting their turn.
For example:
Super Interesting NPC: "Welcome Adventurers! Long have I waited..."
Bored PC: stares out the window, bored as hell, fingering their Battle Axe
GM: (After the dialogue continues for a bit) So, Bored PC, what are you doing while the Super Interesting NPC talks to So-and-So?
Bored PC: Guess I just stare out the window.
GM: "OK, after a few minutes, you see a stumbling-drunk dwarf come walking out of the Inn across the street. Shortly after, a pair of shady-looking humans exit the Inn and follow him down the dark alley..."
At this point, the Bored PC has some decisions to make and could even get some action in, if they want. The whole encounter could just be a quick couple of dice rolls, but it provides opportunity for them to become engaged in the game and might even trick them into interacting with an NPC!
Regarding the problem of delivering information...
Players can only absorb so much plot info before they are "full"
The plot that you have spent hours coming up with and going over in your mind is not going to be very clear to your players. They will need a painful amount of time to take it in and might never catch onto some of your plot elements.
If you feel that your players are bored, but there is more important information that they need, consider putting off that info until after next battle.
Give them some time to digest what they have discovered so far, then have the NPC show back up or even have another NPC deliver the required information.
I like your approaches but perhaps an example of how to detect when the conversation is still useful but has become disengaging for some players? As a side note, I already skip over unimportant NPCs conversation 90% of the time. Some of my players still complained about the main NPCs extended dialogue. Any extra advice on this?
– broselovestar
Nov 28 at 5:16
@broselovestar added some examples regarding shifting the focus during long conversations. Hope that helps
– Destruktor
Nov 28 at 5:42
@Destruktor I love your example for engaging a single bored player. What about when the entire party is bored but theres still important information to gather?
– linksassin
Nov 28 at 5:51
@linksassin added some more info on that topic, basically saying that once the PC's brains are full, give them a break and circle back on the topic later
– Destruktor
Nov 28 at 6:02
2
I particularly appreciate that engaging a waiting player in this way establishes time as a resource to be managed. The person engaging with the NPC is choosing to spend their time gathering information, making connections, etc. That means that they don't get to be doing other things that might come up. If the asker is having issues with players feeling like they are "supposed" to exhaust all dialog options, then this would likely help drive home that talking is one option out of a set instead of an expected chore.
– A Measure of Diplomacy
Nov 28 at 15:08
|
show 2 more comments
up vote
12
down vote
up vote
12
down vote
Have the NPCs break off the conversation when the point of diminishing returns has been reached.
This could be when you, as the GM, know that the most pertinent information has been delivered. Or, it could be when you notice that other players are become bored and disengaging.
Make only NPCs that are important interesting.
You could make other background NPCs just sort of melt into the background, thus signalling that they are not important.
Give the waiting characters something else to do.
This is a little harder to pull off, but if you give them something else to do and rotate the action to them for a few minutes, they will not be as bored, but will be left in suspense as the conversation continues, waiting their turn.
For example:
Super Interesting NPC: "Welcome Adventurers! Long have I waited..."
Bored PC: stares out the window, bored as hell, fingering their Battle Axe
GM: (After the dialogue continues for a bit) So, Bored PC, what are you doing while the Super Interesting NPC talks to So-and-So?
Bored PC: Guess I just stare out the window.
GM: "OK, after a few minutes, you see a stumbling-drunk dwarf come walking out of the Inn across the street. Shortly after, a pair of shady-looking humans exit the Inn and follow him down the dark alley..."
At this point, the Bored PC has some decisions to make and could even get some action in, if they want. The whole encounter could just be a quick couple of dice rolls, but it provides opportunity for them to become engaged in the game and might even trick them into interacting with an NPC!
Regarding the problem of delivering information...
Players can only absorb so much plot info before they are "full"
The plot that you have spent hours coming up with and going over in your mind is not going to be very clear to your players. They will need a painful amount of time to take it in and might never catch onto some of your plot elements.
If you feel that your players are bored, but there is more important information that they need, consider putting off that info until after next battle.
Give them some time to digest what they have discovered so far, then have the NPC show back up or even have another NPC deliver the required information.
Have the NPCs break off the conversation when the point of diminishing returns has been reached.
This could be when you, as the GM, know that the most pertinent information has been delivered. Or, it could be when you notice that other players are become bored and disengaging.
Make only NPCs that are important interesting.
You could make other background NPCs just sort of melt into the background, thus signalling that they are not important.
Give the waiting characters something else to do.
This is a little harder to pull off, but if you give them something else to do and rotate the action to them for a few minutes, they will not be as bored, but will be left in suspense as the conversation continues, waiting their turn.
For example:
Super Interesting NPC: "Welcome Adventurers! Long have I waited..."
Bored PC: stares out the window, bored as hell, fingering their Battle Axe
GM: (After the dialogue continues for a bit) So, Bored PC, what are you doing while the Super Interesting NPC talks to So-and-So?
Bored PC: Guess I just stare out the window.
GM: "OK, after a few minutes, you see a stumbling-drunk dwarf come walking out of the Inn across the street. Shortly after, a pair of shady-looking humans exit the Inn and follow him down the dark alley..."
At this point, the Bored PC has some decisions to make and could even get some action in, if they want. The whole encounter could just be a quick couple of dice rolls, but it provides opportunity for them to become engaged in the game and might even trick them into interacting with an NPC!
Regarding the problem of delivering information...
Players can only absorb so much plot info before they are "full"
The plot that you have spent hours coming up with and going over in your mind is not going to be very clear to your players. They will need a painful amount of time to take it in and might never catch onto some of your plot elements.
If you feel that your players are bored, but there is more important information that they need, consider putting off that info until after next battle.
Give them some time to digest what they have discovered so far, then have the NPC show back up or even have another NPC deliver the required information.
edited Nov 28 at 15:39
NathanS
22.2k6104241
22.2k6104241
answered Nov 28 at 5:00
Destruktor
3,3461953
3,3461953
I like your approaches but perhaps an example of how to detect when the conversation is still useful but has become disengaging for some players? As a side note, I already skip over unimportant NPCs conversation 90% of the time. Some of my players still complained about the main NPCs extended dialogue. Any extra advice on this?
– broselovestar
Nov 28 at 5:16
@broselovestar added some examples regarding shifting the focus during long conversations. Hope that helps
– Destruktor
Nov 28 at 5:42
@Destruktor I love your example for engaging a single bored player. What about when the entire party is bored but theres still important information to gather?
– linksassin
Nov 28 at 5:51
@linksassin added some more info on that topic, basically saying that once the PC's brains are full, give them a break and circle back on the topic later
– Destruktor
Nov 28 at 6:02
2
I particularly appreciate that engaging a waiting player in this way establishes time as a resource to be managed. The person engaging with the NPC is choosing to spend their time gathering information, making connections, etc. That means that they don't get to be doing other things that might come up. If the asker is having issues with players feeling like they are "supposed" to exhaust all dialog options, then this would likely help drive home that talking is one option out of a set instead of an expected chore.
– A Measure of Diplomacy
Nov 28 at 15:08
|
show 2 more comments
I like your approaches but perhaps an example of how to detect when the conversation is still useful but has become disengaging for some players? As a side note, I already skip over unimportant NPCs conversation 90% of the time. Some of my players still complained about the main NPCs extended dialogue. Any extra advice on this?
– broselovestar
Nov 28 at 5:16
@broselovestar added some examples regarding shifting the focus during long conversations. Hope that helps
– Destruktor
Nov 28 at 5:42
@Destruktor I love your example for engaging a single bored player. What about when the entire party is bored but theres still important information to gather?
– linksassin
Nov 28 at 5:51
@linksassin added some more info on that topic, basically saying that once the PC's brains are full, give them a break and circle back on the topic later
– Destruktor
Nov 28 at 6:02
2
I particularly appreciate that engaging a waiting player in this way establishes time as a resource to be managed. The person engaging with the NPC is choosing to spend their time gathering information, making connections, etc. That means that they don't get to be doing other things that might come up. If the asker is having issues with players feeling like they are "supposed" to exhaust all dialog options, then this would likely help drive home that talking is one option out of a set instead of an expected chore.
– A Measure of Diplomacy
Nov 28 at 15:08
I like your approaches but perhaps an example of how to detect when the conversation is still useful but has become disengaging for some players? As a side note, I already skip over unimportant NPCs conversation 90% of the time. Some of my players still complained about the main NPCs extended dialogue. Any extra advice on this?
– broselovestar
Nov 28 at 5:16
I like your approaches but perhaps an example of how to detect when the conversation is still useful but has become disengaging for some players? As a side note, I already skip over unimportant NPCs conversation 90% of the time. Some of my players still complained about the main NPCs extended dialogue. Any extra advice on this?
– broselovestar
Nov 28 at 5:16
@broselovestar added some examples regarding shifting the focus during long conversations. Hope that helps
– Destruktor
Nov 28 at 5:42
@broselovestar added some examples regarding shifting the focus during long conversations. Hope that helps
– Destruktor
Nov 28 at 5:42
@Destruktor I love your example for engaging a single bored player. What about when the entire party is bored but theres still important information to gather?
– linksassin
Nov 28 at 5:51
@Destruktor I love your example for engaging a single bored player. What about when the entire party is bored but theres still important information to gather?
– linksassin
Nov 28 at 5:51
@linksassin added some more info on that topic, basically saying that once the PC's brains are full, give them a break and circle back on the topic later
– Destruktor
Nov 28 at 6:02
@linksassin added some more info on that topic, basically saying that once the PC's brains are full, give them a break and circle back on the topic later
– Destruktor
Nov 28 at 6:02
2
2
I particularly appreciate that engaging a waiting player in this way establishes time as a resource to be managed. The person engaging with the NPC is choosing to spend their time gathering information, making connections, etc. That means that they don't get to be doing other things that might come up. If the asker is having issues with players feeling like they are "supposed" to exhaust all dialog options, then this would likely help drive home that talking is one option out of a set instead of an expected chore.
– A Measure of Diplomacy
Nov 28 at 15:08
I particularly appreciate that engaging a waiting player in this way establishes time as a resource to be managed. The person engaging with the NPC is choosing to spend their time gathering information, making connections, etc. That means that they don't get to be doing other things that might come up. If the asker is having issues with players feeling like they are "supposed" to exhaust all dialog options, then this would likely help drive home that talking is one option out of a set instead of an expected chore.
– A Measure of Diplomacy
Nov 28 at 15:08
|
show 2 more comments
up vote
2
down vote
I suggest that what you need is an "Early Out".
Essentially at most stages of conversation provide your players the opportunity to ask for more info or to explicitly finish the conversation.
You may also need to be more ruthless in deciding when the NPCs are talking too much in your scripts.
When you write the dialog, have a clear goal and a clear set of information the players need to know, and tell them very little else. Dress it up a little in purple prose and characterful tics, but don't go off on a historical tangent or suchlike unless you're confident the players are in the right mood and are of the right mindset to enjoy that.
As a DM, your first and foremost goal is to facilitate the players and arbitrate their actions, telling the story is their job.
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
I suggest that what you need is an "Early Out".
Essentially at most stages of conversation provide your players the opportunity to ask for more info or to explicitly finish the conversation.
You may also need to be more ruthless in deciding when the NPCs are talking too much in your scripts.
When you write the dialog, have a clear goal and a clear set of information the players need to know, and tell them very little else. Dress it up a little in purple prose and characterful tics, but don't go off on a historical tangent or suchlike unless you're confident the players are in the right mood and are of the right mindset to enjoy that.
As a DM, your first and foremost goal is to facilitate the players and arbitrate their actions, telling the story is their job.
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
up vote
2
down vote
I suggest that what you need is an "Early Out".
Essentially at most stages of conversation provide your players the opportunity to ask for more info or to explicitly finish the conversation.
You may also need to be more ruthless in deciding when the NPCs are talking too much in your scripts.
When you write the dialog, have a clear goal and a clear set of information the players need to know, and tell them very little else. Dress it up a little in purple prose and characterful tics, but don't go off on a historical tangent or suchlike unless you're confident the players are in the right mood and are of the right mindset to enjoy that.
As a DM, your first and foremost goal is to facilitate the players and arbitrate their actions, telling the story is their job.
I suggest that what you need is an "Early Out".
Essentially at most stages of conversation provide your players the opportunity to ask for more info or to explicitly finish the conversation.
You may also need to be more ruthless in deciding when the NPCs are talking too much in your scripts.
When you write the dialog, have a clear goal and a clear set of information the players need to know, and tell them very little else. Dress it up a little in purple prose and characterful tics, but don't go off on a historical tangent or suchlike unless you're confident the players are in the right mood and are of the right mindset to enjoy that.
As a DM, your first and foremost goal is to facilitate the players and arbitrate their actions, telling the story is their job.
answered Nov 28 at 12:24
Rowan
5214
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As a Q&A site we're not built to handle advice seeking questions. Those sorts of question are generally better suited for a forum. We have a curated list of recommended forums here if you'd like to check that out. It should be a simple matter to change this into a question that is handled by this site though if you change the question to ask how (ie. "how can I make NPCs conversations more succinct") instead of just asking for advice.
– Purple Monkey
Nov 28 at 4:47
2
Thanks for the feedback. I have made the change
– broselovestar
Nov 28 at 4:51
1
nuklearpower.com/2001/04/12/…
– Renan
Nov 29 at 1:35