The chapter also discusses how to give characters down time to memorize spells and heal up, and a few quick guidelines on military organization.īattlefield adventures have a few similarities to dungeons, but there are some huge differences. Both involve people swinging weapons, for instance.Īn abundance of advice on running battlefield adventures can be found here, from pacing and scale to treasure and experience. This chapter helps with that, by addressing both the differences and the similarities. The first thing a DM needs to wrap his head around is the difference between a dungeon and a battlefield. This book is intended to allow the players to be key players in enormous conflicts without resorting to filling a table with miniatures and taking four hours to play a half-hour skirmish. Heroes of Battle might be just what a DM needs to play D&D on the battlefield. Not only that, but battles have a tendency to dwarf individuals, and when we spend hours making a character, we want the lime light. The combat would be ludicrous, time-consuming and deathly boring. Yes, we eventually expanded to the great outdoors, but we still never took on 200 mounted men at a time. Since the dawn of the hobby, Dungeons & Dragons has been largely about the dungeon crawl.