Thank you! Yes I initially had a lot more of my prep time in this video, then I was like wait, “people don’t want to see ALL of this!” Haha, glad you liked this cut!
The Lazy DM is the most important Book next to the Player Handbook. It cuts out the DMs process of starting to get into D&D and going through the process of overpreparing and then being left with their dicks out when the PCs go somewhere the DM didn't prepare. In the beginning it can be tough to go from overpreparing to preparing as minimal as possible. The notes are only there to remember the DM what the hell is going on and still have a grasp on the story while the players continue to be as chaotic as they can be. Really great book, can't recommend enough.
That’s some high praise! And I totally agree. I used to be an extreme over prepper (and occasionally I still do) but that’s more for worldbuilding than session prep. It’s making me even more excited to do this review!
Mystery and Wonder! These are underappreciated RPG elements in my experience as a player. So I try to focus extra creative effort on mystery and wonder when planning a session I will be running. I often lean into "horror" too, because I like that sort of thing, but not everyone responds well to this tone and as you say, it's all about the players and their characters. It would be nice to see a vid covering "the books on your gaming shelves" sometime.
Fantastic tips, Bob! I haven’t seen this topic covered by other channels, and you really nailed it. Beneficial for both Dungeon Masters and players. I’ll be directing my players to this video and encouraging them to consider using this style of notetaking in the future. Keep up the great work!
Dude this is awesome. Thank you so much. I look forward to using this technique for my upcoming Rime campaign. I think the scatter plot, together with a house rule where the players tell the DM what their plans are for next session will help me nail session prepping and make for a great campaign!
The most organized thing I do in terms of note keeping is actually about how each session went. I create rows for each session and a simple column with each players, and write down what they did each session (and any positive or negative vibes/feedback I got from the players themselves during that session). I do this so I can keep better track of whether or not I'm giving each character and player what they want during the campaign. Good idea about the "and how does your character feel about that?" I'm gonna use that.
Bob! I’m a player in an icewind dale game right now, you straight jumped into that with no mention of spoilers. Haha I do like the scatter plot/flowchart style of note taking, and will be trying to incorporate it.
@@BobWorldBuilder Notion is a great tool if virtual notebooks are your thing. It has enough formatting and design options that help me organize my notes. Sly Flourish also has a template available for a DM planning notebook if you need a starting point.
@@ThomB0ne only downside is the 5mb storage for the free user. Got capped really fast and don't really have the economy to be a sub. That coupled with no choice of having everything stored on your own hard-drive made. So now I use OneNote instead, as I was already subbing for the Office package, and it can do pretty much all the same things as notion, just not as pretty or easy.
I'm a player and I use Scrivener for my long-form notes. It's nice because I can add folders to sort and search easily through the documents to find a particular NPC or place. The one drawback is that it costs $50, but there is a 30-day free trial.
Great video Bob. Will need to try that scatterplot method. I typically use the bullet point method. Having objectives first then the objectives/plot in each of those. I also set a time to associate with them to guess how long they will take.
That’s great and definitely how I used to prep, but I like how scatter plotting/mind mapping helps keep the events of the session more open ended. Usually leads to more creative improv by the players and myself!
I use One Note, introduced by my significant other. It acts like a virtual notebook and holds multiple notebooks, tabs, and pages. I use notebooks to separate my campaigns, tabs to separate cities, maps, npcs, organizations, flora fauna, story beats, and a recap tab which is similar to your notetaking, but the tab's pages are each a session with bullets highlighting important events. I use another notebook and its tabs for each individual campaign's calendar, to keep track of seasons, holidays, and days. I've even introduced custom stat blocks for homebrewed monsters and an encyclopedia to keep track of continent-wide organizations, literature, etc. I highly recommend One Note, especially if you're a DM that uses a tablet instead of piles of papers and book to keep all this information. I still do use pen and paper, but mostly for quick notetaking.
266 likes and not even 12 hours :D I would like a review video on more of Mike's works. Always looking forward to expanding the DnD library, and may buy some for my sister's collection too. Great video as always. Going to have to implement some of these tips and tricks into my home campaign with the husband.
There's also a Lazy Dungeon Master inspired template on Notion you can search up & use! Or make your own page out of each Lazy Dungeon Master Prep-Step, along with a Scatter Plot which can directly link to a Notes section that uses a Table of Contents organized using key words from your Scatter Plot
Fantastic advice. I'm more of an outline guy. I outline plot points, NPCs, items, monster stats, and key notes in a journal. I also utilize sticky notes in the module as reminders and as quick secrets I can just hand to the PCs. During the adventure, I use a red pen to take notes on my outline. The whole thing is a mess, but it's worked really well. I'll try the scatterplot method for our next session to see if I like it better--Im running a DM Guild one-shot called night of fright (A Scooby Doo parody). The Pcs have to spend the night at Dinev's Rest in Caer Dineval. I replaced the antagonist with a duergar .
I highly recommend using microsoft one note for long notes and prep, you can use it across different devices, so if you have a random idea you can jot it on your phone, and it has drawing feature so you can even do these scatter plots
OK, I like the scatterplot idea. It sure beats various scraps of scribbled-upon pages. I am big on improv, but I have "points" of discreet data written down to remind me of ideas/details for each location. I think I can adapt my mess to the scatterplot concept readily.
Nice video Bob. I would also add to talk to the players about things that happened. I forgot an important npc name for one of my PC's, so I asked the player and he remind me.
I know that it's not the best method but I really love using a DokuWiki for all the preparation and post session. I can self-host it, so I don't depend on external services and I have the possibility to share specific pages with my players. I have a set of pages that I use to prepare and check during the sessions, another set of pages with all the information of what happen and even a set of pages only for me and each player where they have all their "secret" information about their characters. OneNote is also a great option that I used on the past. Great to quickly search info also. Never tried Notion but I lot of people praise it.
We have a dedicated note taker for the group. Then we use those to recap before the next session. I use post it notes and my character sheet to write down things my character should know.
As a player, I write a little diary in Google Docs that my DM has access to. That way not only can I remember what happened in the previous sessions, but my DM knows what seemed important enough to write and what didn't. Lots of note-taking program recommendations in the comments, definitely going to check some of them out.
@@BobWorldBuilder It's something I'd love my players to do, so when I'm the player I try to help the DM as much as possible. That way the chances they keep DMing are grater
I use google docs and play on my school chromebook lol.i used to be very thorough but I've switched to mostly improv with a few notes for things I can't just remember. As for summaries, I have one of my players do it in a dedicated discord channel on our server dedicated to my campaign if he can so I know what my players took from the session. If I have to write the summary, I keep it pretty simple.
We have a wood elf ranger named Sariel, who is played by our DMs GF. She has a fancy magical bow that has been a whole ordeal. The mention of the players goddamn blew my mind.
gave this a try last night as a player, what a difference! i was running an only a few hours sleep and i think with out taking note i would have been completely lost. amazing thankz again for putting this together ^.^
Great video, thanks. Can I recommend Scapple for doing digital mindmaps? It might be easier than what you were doing here, and it certainly would be more legible! Any tips on how to take notes as a player, rather than as a DM please?
Had to come back to watch this great video again. Love the idea of Berry Boy. Based on what you said about the wine, I'm assuming the shrub is producing poisonous berries? Did any of the PCs eat the berries or wanted to eat them? How did you handle? Also, how often do you use the scatter plot method for your sessions? I'm def more of a visual learner I think so if I can use this method for every session moving forward that would be great.
Thanks Nick! Yes, the berries are mildly toxic. Some NPCs and I think one character has tried them, and I've jsut described them as incredibly bitter. My thought is that after being fermented, they will be deadly to commoners, succumbing to the poison after a few hours. I've been using it for every session lately, and honestly I think the mood of the game as picked up with more improvised shenanigans :)
Bob, love your videos but I didn't quite got the point of the scatter plot here. Prep is something that really eat up my time but I don't understand how a scatter plot would easy things?
Perhaps Bob will explain better but having just watched the vid I would say it is simply an overview snapshot of how you'd like the session to go down. So you put your players in there, the NPCs you want them to run into or you know they'll run into based on the plans they communicated to you last session, monsters they'll encounter or you want them to encounter, secrets and or lore you want to communicate or hint at, treasures they might find, and connecting them with lines to show relationship/story connections, etc., and this gives you basic direction for your session so you have story-grounding for your session and aren't scattered (ironically) and caught off guard. Afterwards, you edit your scatterplot based on what actually happened and then use this to write up your more detailed, long form notes for each session.
It might not work for everyone, but like I shared at the end of the video, it took me about 15 minutes to write a recap of my previous session, 15 minutes to draw up my plot for the next one (so only 30 minutes prep), and you use that plot to take quick notes during the next session. I realized this video ended up being a little more about the prep side, but basically you jot down any NPCs, items, etc around the PC names as you play
I watched alot of your dragon of icespire peak videos, becuase i learn much better of video/audio instead of just reading the campaign text. For that reason i think you have alot of visual learners amonst your viewers ;)
If your players watch this video, doesn't it spoil your next session for them ? Or did you wait to upload this video until they played the full Moon attack to avoid this problem ?
😂 funny to see your bush is evil. In my RotF campaign the bush (she is called Mi-Li) is super cute but only trust one of the PCs that rescued her from Ravasins grasps. Also she is very jealous and angry if not looked after this little diva.
Hahaha, my notes are awful. I usually ask my players to keep track of who they know, what they know, and why. I typically prepare more tools than anything else. Maybe somethings happened in town and I can figure out details as their looking. (If they go look for evidence its there, but not where they first expected. If they go confront a suspect, the culprit is there but not the person they called out. Basically any way I can sneak in a "yes, but" or a "no, but") Then i might have an encounter or stat block i plan to use which will run into them when ever it makes sense. So if I prepare a bunch of bears, maybe they'll run into them on the road. Maybe they are attacking someone on the edge of town. Maybe they're the animal opponent in a staged arena fight. Lets see where the players go. At the end of the session I'll quickly write down any major plot/character developments + where theyre heading next. This video's method may help a lot once we get into the meat of the story.
Sounds like you have a great system! I love it when players keep track of stuff on their own, and it’s great that you write down other notes immediately after the session! I used to do that, but I usually don’t have the energy :P
"wow, you're a really good note taker! you must study a lot, huh?" "uh, yeahhhhhh. Study. yep." when u learn how to take uber good notes for D&D instead of school XD
Also google docs is my favorite for note taking because I can access it from any device at anytime. I've literally jumped out of the shower to write down an idea that was too good to lose
Fun fact: visual learners don’t exist. Science is pretty sure about that. People (with normal brain function) learn all the same. It’s the topics. Some things are better explained via text, some with a picture or a animation. Mostly a combination is good, videos are excellent to learn something. Not a huge point but good to know that this whole thing is a myth. 😊
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I appreciate your content. No fluff, just thoughtful, substantive and useful information. Thanks for your hard work 👌
Thank you! Yes I initially had a lot more of my prep time in this video, then I was like wait, “people don’t want to see ALL of this!” Haha, glad you liked this cut!
The Lazy DM is the most important Book next to the Player Handbook. It cuts out the DMs process of starting to get into D&D and going through the process of overpreparing and then being left with their dicks out when the PCs go somewhere the DM didn't prepare.
In the beginning it can be tough to go from overpreparing to preparing as minimal as possible. The notes are only there to remember the DM what the hell is going on and still have a grasp on the story while the players continue to be as chaotic as they can be.
Really great book, can't recommend enough.
That’s some high praise! And I totally agree. I used to be an extreme over prepper (and occasionally I still do) but that’s more for worldbuilding than session prep. It’s making me even more excited to do this review!
Great video. Very helpful. I often find that having an actual example is so helpful to get an idea to work off.
Sweet! I’m glad my struggle to write with the new drawing pad was worth it :)
Mystery and Wonder! These are underappreciated RPG elements in my experience as a player. So I try to focus extra creative effort on mystery and wonder when planning a session I will be running.
I often lean into "horror" too, because I like that sort of thing, but not everyone responds well to this tone and as you say, it's all about the players and their characters.
It would be nice to see a vid covering "the books on your gaming shelves" sometime.
Yes! That’s what those secrets are all about! And that would be a fun video, adding it to the list!
Fantastic tips, Bob! I haven’t seen this topic covered by other channels, and you really nailed it. Beneficial for both Dungeon Masters and players. I’ll be directing my players to this video and encouraging them to consider using this style of notetaking in the future. Keep up the great work!
It's worked wonders for my prep time and sessions! Glad you like it :)
Dude this is awesome. Thank you so much. I look forward to using this technique for my upcoming Rime campaign. I think the scatter plot, together with a house rule where the players tell the DM what their plans are for next session will help me nail session prepping and make for a great campaign!
Thank you! I’m glad you found this helpful- and yes, I always recommend having the players tell you their plans ahead of time!!
The most organized thing I do in terms of note keeping is actually about how each session went. I create rows for each session and a simple column with each players, and write down what they did each session (and any positive or negative vibes/feedback I got from the players themselves during that session). I do this so I can keep better track of whether or not I'm giving each character and player what they want during the campaign.
Good idea about the "and how does your character feel about that?" I'm gonna use that.
That sounds like a great system!
I'm a big fan of The Return of the Lazy Dungeon Master. He boils prep down to the essentials.
Yeah, that book is everything I wanted it to be! Looks like we’ll probably get that full review considering we’re at ~150 likes already!
Bob! I’m a player in an icewind dale game right now, you straight jumped into that with no mention of spoilers. Haha
I do like the scatter plot/flowchart style of note taking, and will be trying to incorporate it.
For notes, I recommend Notion. In fact is what Sly Flourish uses.
Well I like the name! Haha, I’ll have to check that out
@@BobWorldBuilder Notion is a great tool if virtual notebooks are your thing. It has enough formatting and design options that help me organize my notes. Sly Flourish also has a template available for a DM planning notebook if you need a starting point.
@@ThomB0ne only downside is the 5mb storage for the free user. Got capped really fast and don't really have the economy to be a sub. That coupled with no choice of having everything stored on your own hard-drive made. So now I use OneNote instead, as I was already subbing for the Office package, and it can do pretty much all the same things as notion, just not as pretty or easy.
I'm a player and I use Scrivener for my long-form notes. It's nice because I can add folders to sort and search easily through the documents to find a particular NPC or place. The one drawback is that it costs $50, but there is a 30-day free trial.
Thanks! Always nice to lean about a new resource!
I have been struggling with note taking in-game. This is great! Thank you ❤️
You’re welcome! I hope it helps :D
I'm still new but this super helps the visual aspect of keeping notes which perfectly fits how I remember things! Thanks for the great video ^^
Great video Bob. Will need to try that scatterplot method. I typically use the bullet point method. Having objectives first then the objectives/plot in each of those. I also set a time to associate with them to guess how long they will take.
That’s great and definitely how I used to prep, but I like how scatter plotting/mind mapping helps keep the events of the session more open ended. Usually leads to more creative improv by the players and myself!
I use One Note, introduced by my significant other. It acts like a virtual notebook and holds multiple notebooks, tabs, and pages. I use notebooks to separate my campaigns, tabs to separate cities, maps, npcs, organizations, flora fauna, story beats, and a recap tab which is similar to your notetaking, but the tab's pages are each a session with bullets highlighting important events. I use another notebook and its tabs for each individual campaign's calendar, to keep track of seasons, holidays, and days.
I've even introduced custom stat blocks for homebrewed monsters and an encyclopedia to keep track of continent-wide organizations, literature, etc.
I highly recommend One Note, especially if you're a DM that uses a tablet instead of piles of papers and book to keep all this information. I still do use pen and paper, but mostly for quick notetaking.
266 likes and not even 12 hours :D
I would like a review video on more of Mike's works. Always looking forward to expanding the DnD library, and may buy some for my sister's collection too.
Great video as always. Going to have to implement some of these tips and tricks into my home campaign with the husband.
Yeah I am floored by the response with likes because I thought that would really be a challenge! Glad you liked this one, Jaime! :)
I use one note, since I've seem many people on the dnd reddit recommend it I think it's really good for organizing.
Nice! Friend of the channel, Anto from Icarus Games, has some solid videos about that! I’ll have to check them out again!
OneNote is an amazing app for notes. Like many others it links over multiple platforms. The way links work in one note is very convenient.
@@darcyw156 there's also the feature where you can invite people to your onenote and can even communicate with them.
@@maddym.5466 I haven't even tried that feature. That's awesome thanks.
Thank you for adding proper subtitles. Much appreciated!
Glad it helped! I try to do it for all my videos! (except the gameplays so far anyway)
@@BobWorldBuilder I'm losing my hearing, so this helps a lot. I don't have to blast the volume!
There's also a Lazy Dungeon Master inspired template on Notion you can search up & use! Or make your own page out of each Lazy Dungeon Master Prep-Step, along with a Scatter Plot which can directly link to a Notes section that uses a Table of Contents organized using key words from your Scatter Plot
Great video. Thanks, Bob!
You’re welcome! Thanks for commenting!
Congratulations on the engagement, young man! Hopefully, you'll get to have all your friends a family at the event when it occurs.
Thank you! Haha, yeah, we've had to set back the planning, to a hopefully safer time in the future
Fantastic advice. I'm more of an outline guy. I outline plot points, NPCs, items, monster stats, and key notes in a journal. I also utilize sticky notes in the module as reminders and as quick secrets I can just hand to the PCs. During the adventure, I use a red pen to take notes on my outline. The whole thing is a mess, but it's worked really well. I'll try the scatterplot method for our next session to see if I like it better--Im running a DM Guild one-shot called night of fright (A Scooby Doo parody). The Pcs have to spend the night at Dinev's Rest in Caer Dineval. I replaced the antagonist with a duergar .
Nice! And hey it sounds like you already have a system that works well for you 👍🏻 Sticky notes are definitely an underused tool!
I highly recommend using microsoft one note for long notes and prep, you can use it across different devices, so if you have a random idea you can jot it on your phone, and it has drawing feature so you can even do these scatter plots
OK, I like the scatterplot idea. It sure beats various scraps of scribbled-upon pages. I am big on improv, but I have "points" of discreet data written down to remind me of ideas/details for each location. I think I can adapt my mess to the scatterplot concept readily.
Yep, just ONE page of messy scribbles per session or two haha
Nice video Bob. I would also add to talk to the players about things that happened. I forgot an important npc name for one of my PC's, so I asked the player and he remind me.
Totally agree!! I made a small mention about chatting with the players between sessions. But that might deserve it’s own short video!
I know that it's not the best method but I really love using a DokuWiki for all the preparation and post session. I can self-host it, so I don't depend on external services and I have the possibility to share specific pages with my players.
I have a set of pages that I use to prepare and check during the sessions, another set of pages with all the information of what happen and even a set of pages only for me and each player where they have all their "secret" information about their characters.
OneNote is also a great option that I used on the past. Great to quickly search info also.
Never tried Notion but I lot of people praise it.
That's new to me! Thanks!
Love your content Bob!
Thank you!
We have a dedicated note taker for the group. Then we use those to recap before the next session.
I use post it notes and my character sheet to write down things my character should know.
That’s great! I definitely recommend having a “scribe” player or two if people want the job!
As a player, I write a little diary in Google Docs that my DM has access to. That way not only can I remember what happened in the previous sessions, but my DM knows what seemed important enough to write and what didn't.
Lots of note-taking program recommendations in the comments, definitely going to check some of them out.
Wow! You are great player!! I love it when players help the DM like that! :)
@@BobWorldBuilder It's something I'd love my players to do, so when I'm the player I try to help the DM as much as possible. That way the chances they keep DMing are grater
Can’t wait to try this
Sweet! Glad you like the idea :)
I use google docs and play on my school chromebook lol.i used to be very thorough but I've switched to mostly improv with a few notes for things I can't just remember. As for summaries, I have one of my players do it in a dedicated discord channel on our server dedicated to my campaign if he can so I know what my players took from the session. If I have to write the summary, I keep it pretty simple.
Yes! Always good to outsource note taking to players if you can! :)
I love you and I love your channel!! Thanks for this.
notion is my best friend. :) I use it for everything and the database système is reallly usefull!
You remind me of a beautiful, thoughtful, kind and wholesome friend of mine. He has a Prog Rock band.
We have a wood elf ranger named Sariel, who is played by our DMs GF. She has a fancy magical bow that has been a whole ordeal. The mention of the players goddamn blew my mind.
this is a really great. i do some of these things but should keep better notes ^.^ thxz for the reminder
Thank you! Better to keep any notes than no notes, and just try to improve where you can!
@@BobWorldBuilder keep putting out them videos and i won't have a choice. awesome work my dood.
gave this a try last night as a player, what a difference! i was running an only a few hours sleep and i think with out taking note i would have been completely lost. amazing thankz again for putting this together ^.^
How about 200 likes in 4 hours 👍
Haha yeah I thought it was going to be a challenge! Definitely have to aim higher next time, but I’m glad I get to make a full video about that book!
Great video, thanks. Can I recommend Scapple for doing digital mindmaps? It might be easier than what you were doing here, and it certainly would be more legible! Any tips on how to take notes as a player, rather than as a DM please?
Great video.
Thank you!
Thank you very much
You are welcome! Thanks for subscribing!
Had to come back to watch this great video again. Love the idea of Berry Boy. Based on what you said about the wine, I'm assuming the shrub is producing poisonous berries? Did any of the PCs eat the berries or wanted to eat them? How did you handle? Also, how often do you use the scatter plot method for your sessions? I'm def more of a visual learner I think so if I can use this method for every session moving forward that would be great.
Thanks Nick! Yes, the berries are mildly toxic. Some NPCs and I think one character has tried them, and I've jsut described them as incredibly bitter. My thought is that after being fermented, they will be deadly to commoners, succumbing to the poison after a few hours. I've been using it for every session lately, and honestly I think the mood of the game as picked up with more improvised shenanigans :)
@@BobWorldBuilder Got you, lol. Thanks for explaining!
Bob, love your videos but I didn't quite got the point of the scatter plot here. Prep is something that really eat up my time but I don't understand how a scatter plot would easy things?
Perhaps Bob will explain better but having just watched the vid I would say it is simply an overview snapshot of how you'd like the session to go down. So you put your players in there, the NPCs you want them to run into or you know they'll run into based on the plans they communicated to you last session, monsters they'll encounter or you want them to encounter, secrets and or lore you want to communicate or hint at, treasures they might find, and connecting them with lines to show relationship/story connections, etc., and this gives you basic direction for your session so you have story-grounding for your session and aren't scattered (ironically) and caught off guard. Afterwards, you edit your scatterplot based on what actually happened and then use this to write up your more detailed, long form notes for each session.
It might not work for everyone, but like I shared at the end of the video, it took me about 15 minutes to write a recap of my previous session, 15 minutes to draw up my plot for the next one (so only 30 minutes prep), and you use that plot to take quick notes during the next session. I realized this video ended up being a little more about the prep side, but basically you jot down any NPCs, items, etc around the PC names as you play
+1 comment of support
Woo! Thanks for commenting
I would say world anvil is a great resource for notes and manging world stuff
I tried that briefly but it seemed a little complex for me
another great video. what editing software do you use to make your videos?
I use a free software called Shot Cut :)
I watched alot of your dragon of icespire peak videos, becuase i learn much better of video/audio instead of just reading the campaign text. For that reason i think you have alot of visual learners amonst your viewers ;)
Yeah haha, RUclips in general probably attracts a lot of people who prefer visuals I guess
What to do if characters leave (because it makes sense in the story) and some die and the group isn't the one you planned your great plot for
If your players watch this video, doesn't it spoil your next session for them ? Or did you wait to upload this video until they played the full Moon attack to avoid this problem ?
Lol they don’t watch my videos 😅
😂 funny to see your bush is evil. In my RotF campaign the bush (she is called Mi-Li) is super cute but only trust one of the PCs that rescued her from Ravasins grasps. Also she is very jealous and angry if not looked after this little diva.
Hi Bob :) Nice video you D&D influencer -Vanessa
Haha 😅 thanks Vanessa!
Hahaha, my notes are awful. I usually ask my players to keep track of who they know, what they know, and why.
I typically prepare more tools than anything else. Maybe somethings happened in town and I can figure out details as their looking. (If they go look for evidence its there, but not where they first expected. If they go confront a suspect, the culprit is there but not the person they called out. Basically any way I can sneak in a "yes, but" or a "no, but")
Then i might have an encounter or stat block i plan to use which will run into them when ever it makes sense. So if I prepare a bunch of bears, maybe they'll run into them on the road. Maybe they are attacking someone on the edge of town. Maybe they're the animal opponent in a staged arena fight. Lets see where the players go.
At the end of the session I'll quickly write down any major plot/character developments + where theyre heading next.
This video's method may help a lot once we get into the meat of the story.
Sounds like you have a great system! I love it when players keep track of stuff on their own, and it’s great that you write down other notes immediately after the session! I used to do that, but I usually don’t have the energy :P
Have a look at obsidian.md, good at building nodes of info that build and link naturally over time
That sounds perfect! Thanks for the tip!
"wow, you're a really good note taker! you must study a lot, huh?"
"uh, yeahhhhhh. Study. yep."
when u learn how to take uber good notes for D&D instead of school XD
One note
I hear that's a great tool!
I always record.
Ahh, I have never tried that! I feel like it would be hard to find the time to listen/watch it all back!
@@BobWorldBuilder Only if i 100% forget
I use legendkeeper.com . It's awesome!!
Nice! Friend of the channel, Anto from Icarus Games, has some solid videos about that! I’ll have to check them out again!
300 likes in 9 hours; did we do you proud Bob?
Also google docs is my favorite for note taking because I can access it from any device at anytime. I've literally jumped out of the shower to write down an idea that was too good to lose
Haha, yeah looks like I really underestimated the excitement for that review! :)
Man you set that like goal way to low lol. That's good though!
Haha yeah I thought it was going to be a challenge! Definitely have to aim higher next time, but I’m glad I get to make a full video about that book!
I use excel
That sounds very efficient! I use excel for lots of things, but probably not enough for dnd!
Am I crazy or is there only 9 hits?
WTF the notes, did you make it on purpose to make it impossible to read and understand? Thanks for the video! (try to cut the self referential adds).
Nope! Like I said at the beginning, this was my first time writing with a drawing tablet. You're welcome for the video!
First!
Woo! Thanks for commenting!
scrivener
Fun fact: visual learners don’t exist. Science is pretty sure about that. People (with normal brain function) learn all the same. It’s the topics. Some things are better explained via text, some with a picture or a animation. Mostly a combination is good, videos are excellent to learn something. Not a huge point but good to know that this whole thing is a myth. 😊