

The DnD Geekĭice, books, rollers and more - The DnD geek is a one-stop shop for all your D&D goodies! Check out our store, or read up on posts by our residentģ5 ⋅ 4 posts / quarter View Latest Posts ⋅ Get Email Contact 4. Sly Flourishįollow this blog where Mike shares resources, articles and guide for building the better Dungeons and Dragons Dungeon Master.Ĥ1K ⋅ 1 post / week ⋅ Feb 2008 View Latest Posts ⋅ Get Email Contact 3. Follow this blog to know about Dungeons & Dragons Tools, Rules, Races, Classes, Feats, Backgrounds, Items, Spells, Monsters, Character Builder, Character Generator, Character Sheet, Homebrew, Marketplace, Digital Books and More.ġ36.6K ⋅ 212.8K ⋅ 2 posts / week ⋅ Aug 2015 View Latest Posts ⋅ Get Email Contact 2. D&D Beyond | An official digital toolset for Dungeons & Dragonsĭ&D Beyond is an official digital toolset for Dungeons & Dragons. If a developer is thus inclined, fantasy fonts would be a nice addition too.1. I’ve also found to be a great match, you can color and create icons and drag them straight in Miro to have different ‘monsters’įor fog-of-war: Alternatively, you can just lay black squares over the map and reveal them piece by piece.Īs-is, the features MiroDnD needs would be a dice roller and ‘player style’ presentation mode. It provides for a cool startle when monsters suddenly appear in the room. I’d have my monsters for a room grouped together, and once the players entered the room, paste the monsters in as they encounter them. They can still zoom out and find them if they really want to, but I found it to be a great solution. You can set the zoom to what players will see when they log in, and put the other assets off to the side. I’ve created modular gaming tiles that I can import. I have been setting all my assets over to the side, and dragging them into place as the players discover them. Vincent, I agree that some options to hide things from the players would be great. Thanks for the mention Marina! I’ve been talking up Miro in gaming forums to let them know it is a very good option for D&D. I would love to hear if there is any support from fellow GM's and players on here. My main request would be a way to fully hide the GUI while still being able to edit everything on the board (for players), and a dice rolling feature allowing us to stay in Miro to roll various dice. There are a few features, while fairly simple to implement, which could radically improve Miro as a virtual tabletop tool. The Dungeon master (me in this case) can use a player board miro and a DM Miro to easily organise his session notes overlaid on a map, track progress and make changes on the fly. By uploading battlemaps and tokens from, players can simulate a board and easily drag and create their own notes (inventory, lore).

Miro works suprisingly well out of the box if combined with a voice chat like Zoom.
SOFTWARE FOR DUNGEON MASTERS PROFESSIONAL
As we already used Miro for our professional work, we quickly began considering it for playing DnD, as a virtual tabletop alternative.
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With lockdown shutting down our physical DnD games in the office, we began looking for an alternative.
