![]() ![]() ![]() If your like me and don’t want to be caught up in the milieu of DDAL accounting, there is a new hope. D&D players are usually either super organized and love record keeping or their not. To be honest, it’s a lot and plenty of players groan about this part of league play. Each DDAL session requires players who participated to record the following: The adventure module/hardcover chapter, session number, Advancement Checkpoints (ACP) awarded, Treasure Checkpoints (TCPs) collected, Downtime and Renown earned, date and location of the session, the DM’s name and DCI number, gold and TCPs spent, and finally a space for notes for play/record keeping. It’s part of the burden we DDAL players have to bear for standardized play throughout the world, but it doesn’t make it any easier. The same record keeping enthusiasm can’t be extended to the Dungeons and Dragons Adventures League (DDAL) log sheet.ĭDAL play adds another level of administration to D&D play. New players quickly learn in D&D things on your character sheet change, either for the better or worse and it all has to be recorded, in pencil. Many of the players I Dungeon Master (DM) or play alongside with, pride themselves on their erasure worn, torn, and pencil smudged Player Character (PC) sheets. Since the mid-1970s, pencil and paper have faithfully followed the game. Screen shot.ĭungeons and Dragons (D&D) is a game of the imagination as much as it is a pencil and paper based game. ![]() Make League play record keeping easy with Adventurer’s League Log. ![]()
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