














⚔️ Rule the realms, craft epic tales, and never let your players guess what’s next!
The D&D Dungeon Master’s Guide (2014) is the essential companion for 5th edition Dungeon Masters, packed with expert advice on worldbuilding, encounter balancing, and magic item creation. It offers deep dives into the D&D multiverse, variant combat rules, and countless tables to spark creativity, making it the ultimate toolkit to elevate your campaigns and keep your players hooked.





| ASIN | 0786965622 |
| Best Sellers Rank | 6,918 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) 8 in Role-Playing & War Games 9 in Hobbies & Games References |
| Customer reviews | 4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars (30,208) |
| Dimensions | 21.62 x 2.16 x 28.37 cm |
| Edition | 1st |
| ISBN-10 | 9780786965625 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0786965625 |
| Item weight | 1.11 kg |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 320 pages |
| Publication date | 9 Dec. 2014 |
| Publisher | Dungeons & Dragons |
| Reading age | 15+ years, from customers |
A**E
Really nice book, least useful of the core books though and you can (and will probably) DM without it
Beautiful book, has the nicest cover and feel by a mile out of the 3. Has some interesting lore in it. Honestly, if you want to be a DM, really your main point is to learn the Player's Handbook off by heart. The book's split into 3 parts, Part 1, Part 2 and Part 3. Here's a rundown of what you get. Honestly, chapters 1-6 are nice for a bit of inspiration, but 6 onwards is really what you're buying this for. As a DM though you'll probably spend way more time in the PHB. I glance at this like once in a blue moon, it's not the type of thing you need on hand if you print yourself all the most useful bits and bobs for your DM screen. Part 1 (Master of Worlds): Chapter 1, which is about world building. Tbh this is very generic advice and it's mostly naturally intuitive anyway, but even if it wasn't you'd probably be best with like, a Kobold guide to Worldbuilding. Chapter 2 is about their setting's planes of existence, which is fairly useful if you want to use a generic setting and you think your campaign will last long enough to get into alternate planes. Part 1 I find pretty superfluous. Part 2 (Master of Adventures): Chapter 3: 10% of the chapter is super important - shows the rules for creating encounters. Useful because the online ones don't seem to actually work very well. 90% of this chapter however is "roll on this d20 table to invent a plot". Like, really, do people do that? Either you're going to invent your own worlds on the fly or you're going to use an adventure module. I mean, you can read this for ideas, but who is going to roll a d12 to find out what the climax of their adventure is? Chapter 4: Roll to make an NPC, same as chapter 3 (at least this is more likely if you quickly had to put something together). More importantly, contains Oathbreaker Paladin and Death Domain for the cleric. These are cool things to spring on a player who falls to the darkside. Also optional rule for Loyalty is in here, you may find useful. Chapter 5: Roll to make a world. Only really useful thing here are sample traps. (Again, read it for inspiration but not really useful). Chapter 6: Shows downtime rules. Useful if you break up your campaign that much? I tend to leave mine on cliffhangers and pick back up straight where we left off though. Nice after a campaign finishes and you want to give your PCs cool new bonuses though. CHAPTER 7: Finally things get good. This chapter is 99 pages on its own. Contains the rules for treasure drops, and then an absolute TONNE of magic items. Worth the buy just for that. Unless you can grab a copy of Forged In Magic: REFORGED perhaps. Part 3 (Master of Rules): Okay here's the entire point of the book. Chapter 8 contains all combat rules, ability checks, inspiration, travel, object use, improvising damage, using battle grids, adds flanking, chases, diseases, sieges, poisons, madness, potion crafting, ways to award xp, how to deal with absent players. Chapter 9 contains ways to modernise it with weapons and use alien technology, some combat options, and otherwise is a homebrew chapter that shows how to make monsters, spells, magic items, backgrounds. Appendices: A: Roll to make dungeons. B: Lists of monsters from the Monster Manual based on environment! Like Arctic, coast etc - super useful. Wish Tome of Beasts had this. Also based on CR. C: Some generic maps. I mean, it's beautiful, the writing is quality and I guess most of it is generically useful to all DMs but it feels like the first half is more for people who don't like to come up with their own material. It's the least useful of the 3 books though. You could probs live without it given that encounter and loot generators exist online and they're the main use, as long as you're comfortable with combat. (Which, tbh is mostly in the PHB anyway).
M**W
Very impressed with 5e DMG
I was a bit sceptical of 5e being promised to 3.5e (completely dismissing WoWe) but this book is full of good stuff. It goes into detail around making story based games with tables full of ideas/concepts. It provides countless tables to randomise or help kick start your imagination like: 'fleshing out NPC's' to make them memorable, 'creating the perfect villain', 'story/plot lines' with twists and intrigue and 'fleshing out dungeons' with ideas of furniture, noises, traps and tricks! It even has a random dungeon generator, treasure list and monster encounter table. The artwork is inspiring and modern and overall well written. In regards to the rule set well that's in the PHB. The DMG provides lots of variant rules to make your game more like 3.5e for advanced players. This includes diagonal movement, flanking, tumble, overrun, trip, disarm massive damage, encumberance and a few others. On a personal note I did not think I would like this edition but the transformation is simple. There is no more bonus/ penalties for every given circumstance so that u need a calculator and Stephen Hawkins brain to keep up in fights, it's simply advantage or disadvantage (meaning - depending on the circs, you roll 2x d20 and choose highest or lowest of the two). It speeds up play and is a good method. They have reduced the amount of attacks of opportunity to literally only when u move out of a threatened square. This allows more movement and more opportunities to be heroic as opposed to 3.5 where one wrong step will get u killed. I DM a game on Roll20 using online tabletop and players are already feeling the power to do more things for example, at level 1, my half Orc barb scaled a crumbling wall to get atop a bridge above them to push the bandit on it, off and over the other side. You wouldn't dream of doing that in 3.5 with the amount of AoO you would incur. I like flavour in action and any chance to do this movie like stuff keeps the game fun and players smiling! The raging half Orc was equally surprised when my other hidden bandit jumped out and pushed him off the bridge onto his companions below!! I know I keep making comparisons with 3.5 but I'm sure there are lots of players like me who love that edition and are cautious about moving over. The magic is not as overpowering in 5e making it balanced for players and DM alike. colour spray has been toned down so that it wont knock out all your monsters for the encounter so they can be coup de grace, glitterdust is no more - blinded condition no longer cripples your char and no more stupid high DC's that is impossible for low wis/int/Cha characters to pass. My only gripes with the book and edition is around treasure. they have toned it down making magic items rare and less available - fair enough. I think the best weapons/ armour are now +3. Yes there are random tables but the items now are categorised in A-I either common, uncommon, rare, very rare or legendary. The guidance on distributing loot is based over the heroic tiers for example; between 1-4th you should roll 8 times on treasure hoard table. As you can imagine rolls can be unreliable and give more or less out. Items no longer have prices or levels, so they are worth a sum equal to their status like all common items are worth 50-100gp. For me I like to know how much treasure a player should have earned to keep them balanced, or at the very least how much treasure to allocate per given encounter difficulty. The concept of ad hoc loot giving is a bit anarchic for me. Overall I'm not gonna let that effect my rating. The way you work out encounters and CR's is much simpler now. Traps are more flavourful and creative too. I feel I'm not to restricted by game mechanics anymore. Im very happy with my purchase and well worth the transformation for unsure 3.5 fans.
K**K
Great book for information
This book is a great choice for D&D lovers, and who wants to get into D&D. There is information about every detail of the world of D&D, which can be a great resource, reference, of just a read if you love the world itself. Artwork is fantastic too !
O**.
Not sealed in plastic shrink wrap but it is New and unused. almost 30% cheaper than buying it locally. so i can't complain. Perfectly Good for what it is.
P**S
Esse livro aborda uma gama tão grande de quesitos que mestres geralmente tem de levar em consideração, e consegue fazê-lo de uma forma que todos conseguem entender seu conteúdo (exemplo: você não precisa ser um geógrafo para entender a explicação que o livro dá sobre demografia e geografia. Basta apenas ler). Não é necessário para mestrar, afinal de contas, a única coisa que vc realmente precisa para jogar RPG é imaginação, mas com certeza é um excelente produto pra você conseguir deixar suas aventuras muito mais ricas, críveis e épicas.
A**D
The only thing to improve this great guide are tabs.
N**S
Produkten är en bok, vad kan jag säga?
K**N
Als bisheriger D&D 1st bzw. AD&D-Spieler, den die Edition D&D 3rd und D&D 4th nicht zu einem Wechsel bewegen konnten, war ich entsprechend skeptisch, was die D&D 5th Edition anging. Um es jedoch vorweg zu nehmen - ich bin vom DMG der D&D 5th Edition begeistert. Pro: - Qualitativ hochwertig und robust verarbeitet. - Viele schöne Illustrationen - insbesondere bei den Beschreibungen der Gegenstände - Viele Themen sind - im Vergleich zu AD&D - auf das Wesentliche und Essentielle heruntergebrochen. - Sehr übersichtlich - Es werden (wieder) alle Welten miteinbezogen (inkl. Krynn, Athas (zumindest angesprochen) usw.) und es ist ein verstärkter Fokus auf das AD&D PlaneScape-Setting vorhanden - was mir persönlich am aller Besten gefällt, da ich unter Anderem auch genau deswegen D&D 3rd und D&D 4th abgelehnt habe, bei denen mir dieser Bezug fehlte (Anm. ich habe die Werke (3rd & 4th) nicht auf Punkt&Komma untersucht - aber die gelegentlichen Einblicke waren schon schlimm genug). Neutral: - Einen Mehrwert in diesem Sinne hat das DMG 5th Edition in diesem Sinne (generelles RPG) nicht. Wer also das AD&D-DMG kennt, benötigt dieses nicht unbedingt, um die Grundregeln eines Meisters/Spielleiters und zum Beispiel der Dungeon-Erstellung zu erlernen. Aber man macht auch nichts verkehrt - bekommt man doch als Bonus zumindest ein auf die 5th-Edition optimiertes Auswahlverfahren wie zum Beispiel Wurf-Tabellen für Schätze etc. Kontra: - Konnte ich bisher keines feststellen. Fazit: Das DMG ist wie in D&D 1st oder AD&D kein muss - aber es macht das Leben für einen Meister/Spielleiter oft deutlich einfacher und ist eine Quelle vielerlei Inspiration. Dahingehend hat sich nichts geändert. Was mir persönlich besser gefällt wie in der D&D 1st bzw. AD&D ist die Ausführung der magischen & legendären Gegenstände. Für noch relativ unerfahrene Meister/Spielleiter ist dieses Buch in jedem Fall zu empfehlen und erfahrene Meister/Spielleiter (zu denen ich mich auch zähle) machen sicher nichts falsch, wenn sie darin investieren - ist es doch als Grundlage für Abenteuer in vielerlei Hinsicht sehr nützlich. :) Abschließend sei noch anzumerken, dass man vom DMG keine übermäßigen Regeln erwarten soll. Paragraphenreiter haben meiner Meinung ohnehin nichts beim RPG verloren und stören nur den Spielspaß. Phantasie ist das Zauberwort - und das schließt vor allem das Meistern mit ein. Erfahrene Rollenspieler wissen eines: (angeblich erfahrene) Meister/Spielleiter die ständig nachlesen sind die langweiligsten überhaupt und vermiesen den Spielern lediglich das Spiel. Meister/Spielleiter dürfen bis zu einem gewissen Grad Gott sein. Und genau das spiegelt auch das DMG der D&D 5th Edition wieder. Allein dafür würde ich einen Bonusstern geben - wenn es denn ginge ;).
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