Roll20 lets you buy digital books, find online groups to play with, upload maps and tokens, fill out character sheets, and even roll dice. It can also do things a physical tabletop can’t, such as play music or add animations to your games. Because it has so many capabilities, learning...
In my campaigns, I use Roll20 for the main interface for maps, tokens, and chat, with D&D Beyond and Beyond 20 open in additional tabs to make dice rolls, link abilities, etc. It requires a bit more CPU power to run both sites, of course, but the time and energy saved on the pla...
For players, we have digital character sheets that will enable them to create their character, manage their skills, abilities, and inventory, and roll dice at the click of a button. The character sheet even takes care of the math for you! To get started with your character, sign up for ...
Regardless of the version you choose, Roll20 earns its keep with built-in dice-rolls, character sheets, tokens, maps, and more. That means you'll end up playing via boards displayed on-screen with markers representing you characters. What's more, it's possible to upload your own art asse...
Slack doesn’t give you the ability to move icons around a map, there are countless tools for maps includingRoll20orFantasy Grounds. You can even upload any image to Google Drive and give your players permission to edit the document so they can upload and move their character tokens or ...
Not all VTTs are designed for intricate world-building and character creation, but most have space for you to input your scenes and tokens. If you want a VTT with extensive world-building capabilities, you might have to fork out some cash to pay for either Foundry, Roll20, or Fantasy Gro...
The die-rolling question is actually super easy if you’re not completely f$&%ing insane and paranoid. Everyone’s got dice. Just let everyone roll dice on their desk and announce the results. And let everyone keep their character sheet however they want. As long as they can see it, no...