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The rise of the professional dungeon master?

Started by Aglondir, July 08, 2019, 10:28:31 PM

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Aglondir

A few years ago, you would have been laughed at for this idea. But now some guy is charging $300 for a 4-hour session. And he has a waiting list.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/careersandeducation/the-rise-of-the-professional-dungeon-master/ar-AAE2mNm?li=BBnbfcN

GnomeWorks

Whether or not I'm a good enough DM to pull this kind of thing off, I don't think I ever would try.

It's just bizarre. There's enough pressure being a DM as it is: having the added pressure of "these are complete strangers paying for a service" has to make it significantly worse.
Mechanics should reflect flavor. Always.
Running: Chrono Break: Dragon Heist + Curse of the Crimson Throne (D&D 5e).
Planning: Rappan Athuk (D&D 5e).

Razor 007

Can you imagine the pressure to not kill off a player character?
I need you to roll a perception check.....

trechriron

Frankly, the idea intrigues me. Probably be a good way to stomach running games I'm particularly fond of (and endure their idiosyncrasies).
Trentin C Bergeron (trechriron)
Bard, Creative & RPG Enthusiast

----------------------------------------------------------------------
D.O.N.G. Black-Belt (Thanks tenbones!)

Shawn Driscoll

I'd charge $120 an hour to put up with lame role-players.

Shasarak

Wow that is great news, I am glad that these DMs are giving it a go so successfully.
Who da Drow?  U da drow! - hedgehobbit

There will be poor always,
pathetically struggling,
look at the good things you've got! -  Jesus

Michele

I can understand there might be demand for this, but I doubt that just any DM could make it work. I couldn't.

Spinachcat

Suckers and their money...

But good for those DMs.

Blood Axe

You think with that money he would have some better terrain like Dwarven Forge......
To DEFEND: this is the pact.
 But when life loses its meaning
 and is taken for naught...
 then the pact is to AVENGE !

Bedrockbrendan

Taking money to GM just seems wrong to me. Also not sure what I think about D&D team building exercises. Sounds like a hustle.

oggsmash

#10
Given the time it takes to prepare to Gm a game, the amount of materials most gms own, and the hassle of just moving your stuff to where ever a group is gaming, I can 100 percent get it.   For a 4 hour session that moves at a good pace would take him probably 2 hours for every hour of play time to prepare for, so 300 dollars for a 12 hour effort is IMO fair pay for fair work, IF HE IS GOOD.  But that is an easy resolution, if he sucks he gets no more business, since he has a waiting list I think he has found his market.   The shocker for me is he has found enough gamers (players) to actually part with money to support their hobby to make this a thing.
  (EDITED TO ADD) I see now, the guy is playing to the right base, young folks getting paid a ton of money in high stress jobs (working for google) to sell his wares.  Heck the price is justified just considering housing costs in San Fran.

Chocolate Sauce

The only way I'd pay for a GM is if she's a topless stripper.

GIMME SOME SUGAR

Quote from: Chocolate Sauce;1094984The only way I'd pay for a GM is if she's a topless stripper.

Hear, hear. I would pay extra if she saluted each dead character with the ping pong ball trick. That would make me run like an idiot towards a sea of spears.

ArrozConLeche

Quote from: Chocolate Sauce;1094984The only way I'd pay for a GM is if she's a topless stripper.

Sounds like an ace business plan. Combine Hooters with role playing games. Instead of curly fries, serve up cheetos and Mountain Dew.

Ratman_tf

Quote from: Aglondir;1094938A few years ago, you would have been laughed at for this idea. But now some guy is charging $300 for a 4-hour session. And he has a waiting list.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/careersandeducation/the-rise-of-the-professional-dungeon-master/ar-AAE2mNm?li=BBnbfcN

Eh. More power to him if he can make it work, but I'm not interested in paying a GM or charging to GM.
The notion of an exclusionary and hostile RPG community is a fever dream of zealots who view all social dynamics through a narrow keyhole of structural oppression.
-Haffrung