Dungeon Crawl Classics 0 Level Character Sheet

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Hyun Orth

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Aug 5, 2024, 1:38:59 PM8/5/24
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Thefunnel pits the players and their ingenuity in controlling two to four peasants against a formidable dungeon of monsters, puzzles, and challenges. Unlike most mainstream role-playing games, the funnel as written in the DCC core book demands following the exact procedure of having players generate their characters entirely randomly. For a convention or one shot, most judges (as GMs are called in DCC) use the Purple Sorceror 0-Level Party generator to save time, though I suspect with more time players would appreciate rolling 3d6 in order, as Crom intended.

This is the story of how the adventuring party was formed. They are the survivors of a peasant raid into a dungeon that tested their wits, will, and courage. It establishes an in-game story for a shared experience they all have and seeks to connect the players emotionally to the at most fifteen short lines of text that make up a 0-level character.


For those who have played any edition of D&D or Pathfinder, DCC is going to come naturally. Technically a clone of the 3e era d20 system, DCC is built on the scaling fundamentals of original D&D. The rules my players needed to interact with the world fit in a quick two to three-page cheat sheet:


My players enjoyed the adventure. As a judge, I liked how the first part of the adventure was wide open allowing players to choose different approaches before narrowing the path to a more linear convention and one-shot-friendly conclusion.


Only a few players were tough enough to survive a hit inflicting damage, none were tough enough to survive a second hit. I may have chuckled a bit too merrily when one player asked if they regained hit points when resting.


However, there is a large community making digital tools for the game. Purple Sorceror Games has a wide array of web-based tools and I suspect there are plenty of VTT groups that do most of their rolling and table referencing here.




When I ran my first Dungeon Crawl Classics adventure, Sailors on the Starless Sea, sixteen 0-level characters went in, and nine characters came out. So I gave every character 11 XP that they earned through the adventure.



Later, with the benefit of hindsight, that didn't seem right. Some players got one 1st level PC, another got two or three. Following this through, I decided XP should be allocated per player, not per character, otherwise what's to stop someone from bringing multiple characters, sidekicks, cousins once removed or stable boys? The DCC game has a conceit built in that you can play multiple characters, established right off from the first funnel adventuere, but the game will break down if you award XP equally to multiple characters run by the same player.



So, the solution I worked out was granting XP to the player, and if they brought multiple characters on an outing (that survived), it was up to them on how they would allocate their experience points between their surviving heroes. Later, I ran another 0-level funnel with this house rule, and lucky players with multiple living characters had the hard decision to decide what survivor got to claim the mantle of 1st level. Later in that same campaign, players with capable 2nd level heroes that were flawed sought out henchmen, proteges and sidekicks, in the hope of grooming new characters, while being protected by the characters that had earned their levels. Felt right.



This system developed into players having a stable of characters, and given the adventure, could decide which one to bring out to play. They leaned towards bringing one character usually, unless grooming/developing another character. This also blunted the trauma of losing a 2nd or 3rd level character, because they had a 1st level character back in town to fall back on.



Somewhere within the AD&D DMG, Gary Gygax has a great article about timekeeping in the Campaign, talking about various characters that come and go, travelling to the dungeon, or carousing about town, or making perilous journeys to see a far off wizard, or just leave characters behind because the players who control them couldn't make the session ... this concept lends itself well to DCC, with an episodic/dungeon storyline and characters of differing levels being able to encounter a wide range of challenges (and sometimes, run screaming together, fear is not level-dependent).



And having different level characters is not a bad thing. If poor luck or decision making strikes, and a hapless player has all their characters killed in the funnel, not to worry -- just let them bring in a few 0-level characters and tag long with the newly minted 1st level heroes ... adventures will still be filled with calamity and challenges that even a 0-level character can contribute to in some modest way ... and they'll catch up eventually, probably.



DCC has a great XP system, where the rewards scale to the difficulty of the encounter, not how many HD the monster has or what level the PCs are ... it allows for multiple characters across multiple levels to join forces. Because higher levels are harder to achieve, new characters will advance quickly to trail only slightly behind the grizzled party veterans, and when failure or death ensues, starting back over at 0-level isn't the end of the world, and later generations of characters still feel like they've accomplished something worthy when they get to those lofty levels.



Now, don't forget to award XP for difficult roleplaying sessions, overcoming traps, and heroic gestures like saving the town from the despotic mayor, gifting a magic sword to the elves, not just when they stab the minotaur in the box ...


One of the most entertaining aspects of the Dungeon Crawl Classics Role Playing Game is the exciting "character funnel," where zero-level characters explore a dungeon (and typically die hilariously in the process). Now DCC RPG offers an even more entertaining twist on this concept: the Scratch-Off Character Sheet! Yes, just like in the lotto. This pack includes sheets with randomized, pregenerated results, covered by silver scratcher spots. Simply bust open a pack and distribute the sheets to your friends. Then everyone scratches off the sheet, discovers their characters, and starts playing!


The zero-level character creation funnel is one of the most popular aspects of DCC RPG play. Now we are thrilled to present an even more exciting improvement on that gaming experience! Instead of rolling up 15 0-levels before the game, you can now save time by using these scratch-off character sheets! Yes, scratch-off, just like the lotto. Each character sheet comes with a scratch-off box for each ability score and other key statistic. Before the game you distribute them to your players. They use a coin to scratch off the appropriate boxes, then you let the dungeon diving begin!


The zero-level character creation funnel is one of the most popular aspects of DCC RPG play. Now we are thrilled to present an even more exciting improvement on that gaming experience! Instead of rolling up 15 0-levels before the game, you can now save time by using these scratch-off character sheets! Yes, scratch-off, just like the lotto. Each character sheet comes with a scratch-off box for each ability score and other key statistic. Before the game you distribute them to your players. They use a coin to scratch off the appropriate boxes, then you let the dungeon diving begin!


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