Have been writing an TTRPG adventure in obsidian recently. Ive written tons and tons of adventures over the years and I love obsidian, but this is the first time the two have overlapped.
Pretty interesting actually. Has changed how I chunk data, with intralinks and such.
Essentially making it a wiki.
I kinda love it tbh.
That and graph view for when you pieces that you haven't filled out yet and you see them as nodes all by their lonesome.
RAVINA: VALLEY OF DARK VINTAGES
In a secluded valley nestled between the looming Karpov Mountains lies Ravina, a village renowned for its exquisite wines that fetch premium prices throughout the kingdom. While the surrounding lands remain locked in winter's grip, this hidden haven has always enjoyed milder weather and bountiful harvests.
But something has changed. The vines weep strange tears. Children whisper of ground that watches them. Dogs howl when the mountains are visible under moonlight. And villagers speak in hushed tones of blue-white figures darting between the rows at night.
As an unnatural blue glow emanates from the mountainside and tensions rise between the village's ancient families, travelers find themselves drawn into generations of secrets buried deeper than the vines' roots.
What price has truly been paid for Ravina's prosperity? What whispers echo from the mountain peaks? And as the mountains' shadow grows longer with each passing night, what ancient debt comes due with the warming soil?
Welcome to Ravina, where the finest wines may leave the most bitter aftertaste...
@kevincasarez 100% can see that. I've used it for notes in general, love stuff, tech projects, etc. But I feel like I'm only now tapping into the advanced features.
I really like that I can see a visual representation of areas that are lacking content or don't interconnect to the larger plot as much as I thought they did.
Thinking I'm going to run this in shadowdark. It will be my first time running that system.
I'll post a teaser of the adventure later
@fluxmind In case you're not aware of it, some good things on this page that I have adopted and use for some of my Obsidian note-taking: https://nicolevanderhoeven.com/blog/20210930-non-lazy-dms-use-obsidian-for-dnd/
@kevincasarez thanks I'll definitely check it out