A few weeks ago, I posted a record sheet for tracking NPC's. Since then, I've been stealing time here and there to make the sheet a little more useful - and to expand my knowledge of JavaScripting in Acrobat. Here's the end result: a self-populating hireling record sheet.
This PDF document will allow you to create and print up to four, um, colorful NPC's based on the Moldvay Basic Dungeons & Dragons rules. Specifically, you can generate characters of any class up through experience level 3 (as well as "normal," zero-level humans). Pefect for generating potential retainers for your low-level adventuring party, the PDF even gives each NPC a distinctive epithet and ultra-brief description. Here's a sample:
The sheet makes some assumptions, such as: most retainers being normal humans or fighters, dwarves and elves being fairly uncommon, and retainers generally coming poorly equipped.
Click here to download the PDF (~2.5MB)
This PDF document will allow you to create and print up to four, um, colorful NPC's based on the Moldvay Basic Dungeons & Dragons rules. Specifically, you can generate characters of any class up through experience level 3 (as well as "normal," zero-level humans). Pefect for generating potential retainers for your low-level adventuring party, the PDF even gives each NPC a distinctive epithet and ultra-brief description. Here's a sample:
The sheet makes some assumptions, such as: most retainers being normal humans or fighters, dwarves and elves being fairly uncommon, and retainers generally coming poorly equipped.
Click here to download the PDF (~2.5MB)
. . . . .
Nice. :D
ReplyDeleteThanks!
ReplyDeleteAwesome!!!
ReplyDeleteLooking at the picture before reading I assumed this was some ancient NPC record sheet from your youth that you just scanned in.
ReplyDeleteThat's a compliment.
Very cool. After seeing le bulette make an NPC generator card for a quick hireling system I put together, I decided I wanted to make a full sheet version with a few of my own tweaks.
ReplyDeleteI was hoping to do it this weekend, but now maybe I should just nick yours instead.
@Jack: Thanks!!
ReplyDelete@Norman: Thanks for the compliment! The original sheets are only 13 years old, so they're not exactly from my youth. (Not by a long shot!)
@Lord Kilgore: I would never discourage someone from doing their own thing - especially since you never know what sort of coolness will arise from someone else's spin on a thing. But if you feel the need to do so, please nick away. :D