How can I get players to focus on the story aspect of D&D?How do I get my PCs to not be a bunch of...

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How can I get players to focus on the story aspect of D&D?


How do I get my PCs to not be a bunch of murderous cretins?How can I deal with players who don't consider the narrative?How do I encourage players to take plot hooks and accept quest rewards?How do I help my players not get caught up on smaller plot points?How does “failure” work in Dungeon World? How does it move the story forward?How can I deal with players who don't consider the narrative?How can I make my players stop speaking out of character?How do I deal with players always (greedily) pushing for higher rewards?How to handle a PC that likes to “push the envelope” without resorting to OOC conversationsDoes the GM or Players move the session?Players skipping side quests just to have a laugh at the DMHow to tell a story where the players do not come out on topHow can I get an uninterested group of players to listen to me, or focus on the game in general?













2












$begingroup$


I have run a couple of campaigns with a few of my friends, and these people are genuinely interested in Dungeons and Dragons.



However, no matter what I do, they will not focus on the story, instead treating it like some sort of slaughter-fest. They do not really kill everything that kills, which is good, but they miss nearly everything in the game because they just fail to interact with it. The only way we have completed campaigns is through me pretty much telling them OOC what to do and where, because they are that lost.



Now, I have read this question ("How can I deal with players who don't consider the narrative?") but it does not seem to answer my problem, as I am posing no challenge nor puzzle. They just fail to pick it up. I am the GM and I have tried to help them in every way I can imagine, but it just does not seem to work. I do not think it is me being a bad GM, because I have played with other groups and that went just fine. Short of telling them "There is a quest here, you should go here and talk to Joe there" what could I do?



For some possibly helpful information, or to just save time, I have tried having NPCs talk to them and hint at so-and-so having a job for them, I have tried having them find letters with a name on it and a note with the start of a quest on it, and they just shrugged and left. I cannot make it any more obvious, and it is starting to affect gameplay, as we are playing one of the official campaigns, with just a little bit of homebrew added (just a bunch of other quests that add some extra leveling up opportunities and loot opportunities).



Short of railroading them, what can I do to get them to focus on the story?



Answers should demonstrate experience or citations per What are the citation expectations of answers on RPG Stack Exchange? and not just be unsubstantiated opinion. What have you done or seen done to address this issue?










share|improve this question











$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    Have you spoken to your group about this yet? You mentioned they were new to it all, so do they know what to expect from the game?
    $endgroup$
    – Ben
    1 hour ago






  • 3




    $begingroup$
    This is a common issue, usually involving miscommunicated goals and expectations. This post is currently too generic to answer specifically, because we can't determine why your players don't pick up clues, and I imagine asking for clarification in comments could be chatty. Perhaps it would help to clarify your issue in chat or by editing with more detail.
    $endgroup$
    – MikeQ
    1 hour ago












  • $begingroup$
    We have actually held several "session 0's" and we do talk about story, and we hold a end session around 10 minutes to the end of our game time, and we talk about each other's expectations. One is borderline murder-hobo, and he does express his interest to pretty much kill the biggest, baddest thing around. He is also extremely touchy in game, and will blow up at the slightest insult. However, thankfully, that is only in game, and we do all realise that it is just a game. One of the other guys just seems... not really willing to contribute to the better of the group. We are a band of 4 people.
    $endgroup$
    – Bookwyrm
    1 hour ago










  • $begingroup$
    To clarify my comment, when I refer to "one" I mean PC's.
    $endgroup$
    – Bookwyrm
    1 hour ago










  • $begingroup$
    1/2 way through Bookwyrm's post I had a half dozen suggestions. Most of those he went on to say he's already tried, either in his actual post or other comments. I think he might be dealing with the next generation of post-MMO players who, as MikeQ hinted, have extremely different expectations. For a segment of the upcoming generation, DnD isn't an opportunity to explore a world that is as real as it is strange, but to simply grind World Of Warcraft at a table. If you've done all the diligence advised here, do yourself a favor and find a group that makes you as happy as you try to make them.
    $endgroup$
    – lance.dolan
    9 mins ago
















2












$begingroup$


I have run a couple of campaigns with a few of my friends, and these people are genuinely interested in Dungeons and Dragons.



However, no matter what I do, they will not focus on the story, instead treating it like some sort of slaughter-fest. They do not really kill everything that kills, which is good, but they miss nearly everything in the game because they just fail to interact with it. The only way we have completed campaigns is through me pretty much telling them OOC what to do and where, because they are that lost.



Now, I have read this question ("How can I deal with players who don't consider the narrative?") but it does not seem to answer my problem, as I am posing no challenge nor puzzle. They just fail to pick it up. I am the GM and I have tried to help them in every way I can imagine, but it just does not seem to work. I do not think it is me being a bad GM, because I have played with other groups and that went just fine. Short of telling them "There is a quest here, you should go here and talk to Joe there" what could I do?



For some possibly helpful information, or to just save time, I have tried having NPCs talk to them and hint at so-and-so having a job for them, I have tried having them find letters with a name on it and a note with the start of a quest on it, and they just shrugged and left. I cannot make it any more obvious, and it is starting to affect gameplay, as we are playing one of the official campaigns, with just a little bit of homebrew added (just a bunch of other quests that add some extra leveling up opportunities and loot opportunities).



Short of railroading them, what can I do to get them to focus on the story?



Answers should demonstrate experience or citations per What are the citation expectations of answers on RPG Stack Exchange? and not just be unsubstantiated opinion. What have you done or seen done to address this issue?










share|improve this question











$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    Have you spoken to your group about this yet? You mentioned they were new to it all, so do they know what to expect from the game?
    $endgroup$
    – Ben
    1 hour ago






  • 3




    $begingroup$
    This is a common issue, usually involving miscommunicated goals and expectations. This post is currently too generic to answer specifically, because we can't determine why your players don't pick up clues, and I imagine asking for clarification in comments could be chatty. Perhaps it would help to clarify your issue in chat or by editing with more detail.
    $endgroup$
    – MikeQ
    1 hour ago












  • $begingroup$
    We have actually held several "session 0's" and we do talk about story, and we hold a end session around 10 minutes to the end of our game time, and we talk about each other's expectations. One is borderline murder-hobo, and he does express his interest to pretty much kill the biggest, baddest thing around. He is also extremely touchy in game, and will blow up at the slightest insult. However, thankfully, that is only in game, and we do all realise that it is just a game. One of the other guys just seems... not really willing to contribute to the better of the group. We are a band of 4 people.
    $endgroup$
    – Bookwyrm
    1 hour ago










  • $begingroup$
    To clarify my comment, when I refer to "one" I mean PC's.
    $endgroup$
    – Bookwyrm
    1 hour ago










  • $begingroup$
    1/2 way through Bookwyrm's post I had a half dozen suggestions. Most of those he went on to say he's already tried, either in his actual post or other comments. I think he might be dealing with the next generation of post-MMO players who, as MikeQ hinted, have extremely different expectations. For a segment of the upcoming generation, DnD isn't an opportunity to explore a world that is as real as it is strange, but to simply grind World Of Warcraft at a table. If you've done all the diligence advised here, do yourself a favor and find a group that makes you as happy as you try to make them.
    $endgroup$
    – lance.dolan
    9 mins ago














2












2








2





$begingroup$


I have run a couple of campaigns with a few of my friends, and these people are genuinely interested in Dungeons and Dragons.



However, no matter what I do, they will not focus on the story, instead treating it like some sort of slaughter-fest. They do not really kill everything that kills, which is good, but they miss nearly everything in the game because they just fail to interact with it. The only way we have completed campaigns is through me pretty much telling them OOC what to do and where, because they are that lost.



Now, I have read this question ("How can I deal with players who don't consider the narrative?") but it does not seem to answer my problem, as I am posing no challenge nor puzzle. They just fail to pick it up. I am the GM and I have tried to help them in every way I can imagine, but it just does not seem to work. I do not think it is me being a bad GM, because I have played with other groups and that went just fine. Short of telling them "There is a quest here, you should go here and talk to Joe there" what could I do?



For some possibly helpful information, or to just save time, I have tried having NPCs talk to them and hint at so-and-so having a job for them, I have tried having them find letters with a name on it and a note with the start of a quest on it, and they just shrugged and left. I cannot make it any more obvious, and it is starting to affect gameplay, as we are playing one of the official campaigns, with just a little bit of homebrew added (just a bunch of other quests that add some extra leveling up opportunities and loot opportunities).



Short of railroading them, what can I do to get them to focus on the story?



Answers should demonstrate experience or citations per What are the citation expectations of answers on RPG Stack Exchange? and not just be unsubstantiated opinion. What have you done or seen done to address this issue?










share|improve this question











$endgroup$




I have run a couple of campaigns with a few of my friends, and these people are genuinely interested in Dungeons and Dragons.



However, no matter what I do, they will not focus on the story, instead treating it like some sort of slaughter-fest. They do not really kill everything that kills, which is good, but they miss nearly everything in the game because they just fail to interact with it. The only way we have completed campaigns is through me pretty much telling them OOC what to do and where, because they are that lost.



Now, I have read this question ("How can I deal with players who don't consider the narrative?") but it does not seem to answer my problem, as I am posing no challenge nor puzzle. They just fail to pick it up. I am the GM and I have tried to help them in every way I can imagine, but it just does not seem to work. I do not think it is me being a bad GM, because I have played with other groups and that went just fine. Short of telling them "There is a quest here, you should go here and talk to Joe there" what could I do?



For some possibly helpful information, or to just save time, I have tried having NPCs talk to them and hint at so-and-so having a job for them, I have tried having them find letters with a name on it and a note with the start of a quest on it, and they just shrugged and left. I cannot make it any more obvious, and it is starting to affect gameplay, as we are playing one of the official campaigns, with just a little bit of homebrew added (just a bunch of other quests that add some extra leveling up opportunities and loot opportunities).



Short of railroading them, what can I do to get them to focus on the story?



Answers should demonstrate experience or citations per What are the citation expectations of answers on RPG Stack Exchange? and not just be unsubstantiated opinion. What have you done or seen done to address this issue?







dnd-5e problem-players story






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 56 mins ago









mxyzplk

153k23380611




153k23380611










asked 1 hour ago









BookwyrmBookwyrm

397312




397312












  • $begingroup$
    Have you spoken to your group about this yet? You mentioned they were new to it all, so do they know what to expect from the game?
    $endgroup$
    – Ben
    1 hour ago






  • 3




    $begingroup$
    This is a common issue, usually involving miscommunicated goals and expectations. This post is currently too generic to answer specifically, because we can't determine why your players don't pick up clues, and I imagine asking for clarification in comments could be chatty. Perhaps it would help to clarify your issue in chat or by editing with more detail.
    $endgroup$
    – MikeQ
    1 hour ago












  • $begingroup$
    We have actually held several "session 0's" and we do talk about story, and we hold a end session around 10 minutes to the end of our game time, and we talk about each other's expectations. One is borderline murder-hobo, and he does express his interest to pretty much kill the biggest, baddest thing around. He is also extremely touchy in game, and will blow up at the slightest insult. However, thankfully, that is only in game, and we do all realise that it is just a game. One of the other guys just seems... not really willing to contribute to the better of the group. We are a band of 4 people.
    $endgroup$
    – Bookwyrm
    1 hour ago










  • $begingroup$
    To clarify my comment, when I refer to "one" I mean PC's.
    $endgroup$
    – Bookwyrm
    1 hour ago










  • $begingroup$
    1/2 way through Bookwyrm's post I had a half dozen suggestions. Most of those he went on to say he's already tried, either in his actual post or other comments. I think he might be dealing with the next generation of post-MMO players who, as MikeQ hinted, have extremely different expectations. For a segment of the upcoming generation, DnD isn't an opportunity to explore a world that is as real as it is strange, but to simply grind World Of Warcraft at a table. If you've done all the diligence advised here, do yourself a favor and find a group that makes you as happy as you try to make them.
    $endgroup$
    – lance.dolan
    9 mins ago


















  • $begingroup$
    Have you spoken to your group about this yet? You mentioned they were new to it all, so do they know what to expect from the game?
    $endgroup$
    – Ben
    1 hour ago






  • 3




    $begingroup$
    This is a common issue, usually involving miscommunicated goals and expectations. This post is currently too generic to answer specifically, because we can't determine why your players don't pick up clues, and I imagine asking for clarification in comments could be chatty. Perhaps it would help to clarify your issue in chat or by editing with more detail.
    $endgroup$
    – MikeQ
    1 hour ago












  • $begingroup$
    We have actually held several "session 0's" and we do talk about story, and we hold a end session around 10 minutes to the end of our game time, and we talk about each other's expectations. One is borderline murder-hobo, and he does express his interest to pretty much kill the biggest, baddest thing around. He is also extremely touchy in game, and will blow up at the slightest insult. However, thankfully, that is only in game, and we do all realise that it is just a game. One of the other guys just seems... not really willing to contribute to the better of the group. We are a band of 4 people.
    $endgroup$
    – Bookwyrm
    1 hour ago










  • $begingroup$
    To clarify my comment, when I refer to "one" I mean PC's.
    $endgroup$
    – Bookwyrm
    1 hour ago










  • $begingroup$
    1/2 way through Bookwyrm's post I had a half dozen suggestions. Most of those he went on to say he's already tried, either in his actual post or other comments. I think he might be dealing with the next generation of post-MMO players who, as MikeQ hinted, have extremely different expectations. For a segment of the upcoming generation, DnD isn't an opportunity to explore a world that is as real as it is strange, but to simply grind World Of Warcraft at a table. If you've done all the diligence advised here, do yourself a favor and find a group that makes you as happy as you try to make them.
    $endgroup$
    – lance.dolan
    9 mins ago
















$begingroup$
Have you spoken to your group about this yet? You mentioned they were new to it all, so do they know what to expect from the game?
$endgroup$
– Ben
1 hour ago




$begingroup$
Have you spoken to your group about this yet? You mentioned they were new to it all, so do they know what to expect from the game?
$endgroup$
– Ben
1 hour ago




3




3




$begingroup$
This is a common issue, usually involving miscommunicated goals and expectations. This post is currently too generic to answer specifically, because we can't determine why your players don't pick up clues, and I imagine asking for clarification in comments could be chatty. Perhaps it would help to clarify your issue in chat or by editing with more detail.
$endgroup$
– MikeQ
1 hour ago






$begingroup$
This is a common issue, usually involving miscommunicated goals and expectations. This post is currently too generic to answer specifically, because we can't determine why your players don't pick up clues, and I imagine asking for clarification in comments could be chatty. Perhaps it would help to clarify your issue in chat or by editing with more detail.
$endgroup$
– MikeQ
1 hour ago














$begingroup$
We have actually held several "session 0's" and we do talk about story, and we hold a end session around 10 minutes to the end of our game time, and we talk about each other's expectations. One is borderline murder-hobo, and he does express his interest to pretty much kill the biggest, baddest thing around. He is also extremely touchy in game, and will blow up at the slightest insult. However, thankfully, that is only in game, and we do all realise that it is just a game. One of the other guys just seems... not really willing to contribute to the better of the group. We are a band of 4 people.
$endgroup$
– Bookwyrm
1 hour ago




$begingroup$
We have actually held several "session 0's" and we do talk about story, and we hold a end session around 10 minutes to the end of our game time, and we talk about each other's expectations. One is borderline murder-hobo, and he does express his interest to pretty much kill the biggest, baddest thing around. He is also extremely touchy in game, and will blow up at the slightest insult. However, thankfully, that is only in game, and we do all realise that it is just a game. One of the other guys just seems... not really willing to contribute to the better of the group. We are a band of 4 people.
$endgroup$
– Bookwyrm
1 hour ago












$begingroup$
To clarify my comment, when I refer to "one" I mean PC's.
$endgroup$
– Bookwyrm
1 hour ago




$begingroup$
To clarify my comment, when I refer to "one" I mean PC's.
$endgroup$
– Bookwyrm
1 hour ago












$begingroup$
1/2 way through Bookwyrm's post I had a half dozen suggestions. Most of those he went on to say he's already tried, either in his actual post or other comments. I think he might be dealing with the next generation of post-MMO players who, as MikeQ hinted, have extremely different expectations. For a segment of the upcoming generation, DnD isn't an opportunity to explore a world that is as real as it is strange, but to simply grind World Of Warcraft at a table. If you've done all the diligence advised here, do yourself a favor and find a group that makes you as happy as you try to make them.
$endgroup$
– lance.dolan
9 mins ago




$begingroup$
1/2 way through Bookwyrm's post I had a half dozen suggestions. Most of those he went on to say he's already tried, either in his actual post or other comments. I think he might be dealing with the next generation of post-MMO players who, as MikeQ hinted, have extremely different expectations. For a segment of the upcoming generation, DnD isn't an opportunity to explore a world that is as real as it is strange, but to simply grind World Of Warcraft at a table. If you've done all the diligence advised here, do yourself a favor and find a group that makes you as happy as you try to make them.
$endgroup$
– lance.dolan
9 mins ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















5












$begingroup$

You're not being as obvious as you think you are



Something that is obvious from your side of the GM screen is not necessarily so from the other side for all sorts of reasons. I refer you to selective attention for an example.



The three clue rule



You have to give your players at least 3 clues if you want them to follow a lead because they will overlook one, misinterpret the second and maybe work things out on the third.



Forget the story



Just set up a bunch of loosely connected adventures and let the players kill stuff. You can then say "The adventure is here."



Railroad them



Railroads are only a problem when they are a problem - if your players are happy being led around by the nose lead them around by the nose.



Find different players



Some players do not care about the story and never will. If that bothers you find players who do care.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$













  • $begingroup$
    I like the Selective Attention test, and tomorrow I am going to convene with my group and actually talk about if being railroaded is going to be a problem. It does bother me a little bit that they are not paying attention to the story, but I do think that that could be fixed, given the right circumstances. I also like the "Bunch of loosely connected adventures", because that fits in with our murderous rogue. Thanks!
    $endgroup$
    – Bookwyrm
    43 mins ago











Your Answer





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1 Answer
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active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









5












$begingroup$

You're not being as obvious as you think you are



Something that is obvious from your side of the GM screen is not necessarily so from the other side for all sorts of reasons. I refer you to selective attention for an example.



The three clue rule



You have to give your players at least 3 clues if you want them to follow a lead because they will overlook one, misinterpret the second and maybe work things out on the third.



Forget the story



Just set up a bunch of loosely connected adventures and let the players kill stuff. You can then say "The adventure is here."



Railroad them



Railroads are only a problem when they are a problem - if your players are happy being led around by the nose lead them around by the nose.



Find different players



Some players do not care about the story and never will. If that bothers you find players who do care.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$













  • $begingroup$
    I like the Selective Attention test, and tomorrow I am going to convene with my group and actually talk about if being railroaded is going to be a problem. It does bother me a little bit that they are not paying attention to the story, but I do think that that could be fixed, given the right circumstances. I also like the "Bunch of loosely connected adventures", because that fits in with our murderous rogue. Thanks!
    $endgroup$
    – Bookwyrm
    43 mins ago
















5












$begingroup$

You're not being as obvious as you think you are



Something that is obvious from your side of the GM screen is not necessarily so from the other side for all sorts of reasons. I refer you to selective attention for an example.



The three clue rule



You have to give your players at least 3 clues if you want them to follow a lead because they will overlook one, misinterpret the second and maybe work things out on the third.



Forget the story



Just set up a bunch of loosely connected adventures and let the players kill stuff. You can then say "The adventure is here."



Railroad them



Railroads are only a problem when they are a problem - if your players are happy being led around by the nose lead them around by the nose.



Find different players



Some players do not care about the story and never will. If that bothers you find players who do care.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$













  • $begingroup$
    I like the Selective Attention test, and tomorrow I am going to convene with my group and actually talk about if being railroaded is going to be a problem. It does bother me a little bit that they are not paying attention to the story, but I do think that that could be fixed, given the right circumstances. I also like the "Bunch of loosely connected adventures", because that fits in with our murderous rogue. Thanks!
    $endgroup$
    – Bookwyrm
    43 mins ago














5












5








5





$begingroup$

You're not being as obvious as you think you are



Something that is obvious from your side of the GM screen is not necessarily so from the other side for all sorts of reasons. I refer you to selective attention for an example.



The three clue rule



You have to give your players at least 3 clues if you want them to follow a lead because they will overlook one, misinterpret the second and maybe work things out on the third.



Forget the story



Just set up a bunch of loosely connected adventures and let the players kill stuff. You can then say "The adventure is here."



Railroad them



Railroads are only a problem when they are a problem - if your players are happy being led around by the nose lead them around by the nose.



Find different players



Some players do not care about the story and never will. If that bothers you find players who do care.






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$



You're not being as obvious as you think you are



Something that is obvious from your side of the GM screen is not necessarily so from the other side for all sorts of reasons. I refer you to selective attention for an example.



The three clue rule



You have to give your players at least 3 clues if you want them to follow a lead because they will overlook one, misinterpret the second and maybe work things out on the third.



Forget the story



Just set up a bunch of loosely connected adventures and let the players kill stuff. You can then say "The adventure is here."



Railroad them



Railroads are only a problem when they are a problem - if your players are happy being led around by the nose lead them around by the nose.



Find different players



Some players do not care about the story and never will. If that bothers you find players who do care.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 1 hour ago









Dale MDale M

108k21280481




108k21280481












  • $begingroup$
    I like the Selective Attention test, and tomorrow I am going to convene with my group and actually talk about if being railroaded is going to be a problem. It does bother me a little bit that they are not paying attention to the story, but I do think that that could be fixed, given the right circumstances. I also like the "Bunch of loosely connected adventures", because that fits in with our murderous rogue. Thanks!
    $endgroup$
    – Bookwyrm
    43 mins ago


















  • $begingroup$
    I like the Selective Attention test, and tomorrow I am going to convene with my group and actually talk about if being railroaded is going to be a problem. It does bother me a little bit that they are not paying attention to the story, but I do think that that could be fixed, given the right circumstances. I also like the "Bunch of loosely connected adventures", because that fits in with our murderous rogue. Thanks!
    $endgroup$
    – Bookwyrm
    43 mins ago
















$begingroup$
I like the Selective Attention test, and tomorrow I am going to convene with my group and actually talk about if being railroaded is going to be a problem. It does bother me a little bit that they are not paying attention to the story, but I do think that that could be fixed, given the right circumstances. I also like the "Bunch of loosely connected adventures", because that fits in with our murderous rogue. Thanks!
$endgroup$
– Bookwyrm
43 mins ago




$begingroup$
I like the Selective Attention test, and tomorrow I am going to convene with my group and actually talk about if being railroaded is going to be a problem. It does bother me a little bit that they are not paying attention to the story, but I do think that that could be fixed, given the right circumstances. I also like the "Bunch of loosely connected adventures", because that fits in with our murderous rogue. Thanks!
$endgroup$
– Bookwyrm
43 mins ago


















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