![]() ![]() You can of course have all the standard options of bold, italics, underlined, various headers, embedded media, et cetera, but you can also have footnotes, quotes, lists, colors, and much much more. ![]() Obsidian Portal uses Textile, a simple text markup that gives you a lot of options nonetheless. What I do want to talk about a bit more though is what you can do with the text. The rest can be done through Textile.Īlthough a premium feature, Obsidian Portal also offers a dice roller. Some basic text markup is available from the toolbar over the text box and additional functionality from the buttons on the right side. Here you can see the editing for a wiki page. Not much else to say here, you just put your maps there. The character sheet, in particular, is a great option to have, and there are also multiple versions of character sheets you can choose from – many of them created by the community, so if you have the skill and time for it you can also make your own.įinally, you have a separate section specifically for maps. These are a bit different from simple wiki pages because you can add a lot more details – Name, obviously, but also a description, a biography, their goals, and finally a dynamic character sheet (depending, of course, on what RPG system you’ve selected as in use for the campaign). The bonuses on saves and skills are updated dynamically from the ability modifiers and the proficiency bonus. Part of an available DnD 5e character sheet by a user named Solarbear. ![]() There aren’t different categories of wiki pages, but you can create and add tags on pages to mark them. This is where almost everything is stored groups and organizations primarily of course, but also locations, creatures, items, technologies, magic rituals, et cetera – you know what a wiki is, so you get the point. Each post is usually a single session, although I’ve seen people use some simple tricks to group sessions together – so each post in the Adventure Log represents a chapter? season? whatever you want to call it of the adventure, and each session is actually linked to a wiki page.Īnd speaking of, you next have the Wiki, most likely the largest part of the setup. It’s pretty lean and easy to navigate.Īfter that, you have the Adventure Log, where you can post accounts of the adventures the players go through as part of your campaign. Obsidian Portal is a campaign management system, allowing you to create a wiki of sorts for your campaign, as well as including some tools to help with session scheduling and playing.Įach campaign has a number of different types of pages you can fill, starting with a Front Page for, well, everything you want to show up front – an introduction and the main concept of your campaign. ![]()
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