Dnd 5e Encounter Distance Dmg Chart Mastery To Dmg Calculator Marks Hunter In a typical campaign, characters aren’t driven mad by the horrors they face and the carnage they inflict day after day, but sometimes the stress of being an adventurer can be too much to bear. The app will calculate the XP award given as well as the difficulty of the planned encounter taking into account party size and encounter size as well. Below the whole thing is a progress bar that illustrates the relative difficulty between trivial and deadly encounter thresholds for the party. Dnd 5e Dmg Calculating Encounter Difficulty Crossword Dnd 5e Dmg Types pic3.png This version uses Fudly's formula for calculating the difficulty, which seems to agree with the 5E DMG. I removed the 'super deadly' threshold, and any changes to the random encounter template. Encounters generated using random encounter template will still have the difficulty calculator available. Dnd 5e Encounter Calculator.
I'm new to DMing! How do I start?
First, congratulations on running a game! You'll get the hang of it pretty quickly. The easiest way to build an encounter is to pick an enemy from the Monster Manual with a CR around the same as the level of PCs in your party, maybe one higher if you want them to have a tough fight. This won't always be perfect, but it's a good place to start. You'll find that this method mostly generates Medium or Hard difficulty encounters, which is about what you are aiming for.
To spice things up, increase the number of enemies. Either go for a group of lower-level mooks, or a second bad guy of around the same CR, or mix and match. Don't go too wild with this, though - the PCs can only take on so many enemies at once. In 5th Edition, outnumbering your opponent can be quite an advantage. Be very careful before putting your PCs up against a Deadly encounter, especially against lots of enemies.
Why are my players finding encounters so easy?
If you're using this calculator a lot, you may have found it can seem to overstate the difficulty of encounters. First I'll explain why this happens, and then how you can fix this.
The biggest culprit for easy encounters is the party resting too much. If you're like me, your parties tend to have maybe two or three encounters per long rest, often with short rests in between - this makes more sense for some play styles, but causes balance problems.
The way 5th Edition balances resources assumes that parties will have at least a couple of medium-difficulty encounters between each short rest, and maybe two or three short rests between each long rest. This forces characters to be conservative with their limited resources (spell slots, class features, hit dice, and so forth), making each individual encounter tougher. A party that can approach an encounter fresh, with no worries about saving resources, will often find that encounter relatively easy.
How do you fix this? You have two choices.
- Don't let your party rest as often. There are a couple of ways of doing this - you could have encounters happen closer together without any chance for a break between each (maybe putting the characters on a timer, or make it dangerous to rest), or use the 'Gritty Realism' rest model as described in the DMG (page 267) which makes rests take longer. I have started using Gritty Realism in my games and I've found that it makes designing adventures substantially easier, and stops the party attempting to rest at every opportunity.
- Make the encounters harder. You can probably make the Adjusted Difficulty Rating of an encounter up to double or maybe even triple (for very experienced parties) the XP* rating of a Deadly encounter, and the fight will be more challenging and risky, but not impossible for a prepared party. There are some downsides to this approach, however. Fights become much more dangerous as an encounter can quickly snowball from challenging to deadly if one or two of the PCs are dropped. This is especially pronounced at lower levels where a single hit can be enough to put someone on the floor. If you use this method, you may need to increase the difficulty slowly until you get to the level of challenge you want.
*Note for those who use CR, this scales differently. You may only want to increase the CR of encounters by 1 or 2.
This is an update/streamline of hereander's original version that was updated by Fudly.
How it works:
Put the attachment in your fantasy ground's extensions folder. On my computer that is:
Dnd 5e Encounter Difficulty Calculator
Activate the extension for your campaignpic1.png
Choose whether you want to get party levels from the combat tracker or the party sheet.
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To use this, as you're creating a new encounter, click the refresh button to update the XP total, and then press 'Calculate Encounter Difficulty' to output the difficulty of the encounter to chat.
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Dnd 5e Dmg Calculating Encounter Difficulty Chart
Dnd 5e Dmg Calculating Encounter Difficulty Test
This version uses Fudly's formula for calculating the difficulty, which seems to agree with the 5E DMG. I removed the 'super deadly' threshold, and any changes to the random encounter template. Encounters generated using random encounter template will still have the difficulty calculator available.Dnd 5e Difficulty Calculator
Dnd 5e Encounter List
- 5E_Encounter_Calc_new.ext(3.5 KB, 1192 views)