the implicit DM’s turn in OD&D

In OD&D, there’s a phase of the game that’s never mentioned in the rulebook, but still exists: the DM’s turn.

Remember that D&D’s direct predecessor was Chainmail, in which players alternated turns. D&D is a different type of game, but it might have taken Gygax and Arneson a little time to realize how different. Some traditional ideas, like opponents alternating turns, still linger. I think that if you imagine that the DM and the players alternate turns, it makes some troublesome terminology and some confusing passages make more sense.

In The Underworld and Wilderness Adventures:

Movement is in segments of approximately ten minutes. Thus it takes ten minutes to move approximately two moves – 120 feet for a fully-armored character. Two moves constitute a turn, except in flight/pursuit situations where the moves/turn will be doubled (and no mapping allowed) … At the end of every turn the referee will roll a six-sided die to see if a “wandering monster” has been encountered.

What? What’s a move, and why do you get two (or more) per turn? Why not just say, as does AD&D, that you move so far in a turn, and you check for wandering monsters after two turns?

And what about this passage about wilderness travel:

Turns: Each move will constitute one day. Each day is considered a turn. … Wandering monsters: At the end of each day (turn) the referee will check to see if a monster has been encountered.

Why does a day need to be considered a turn? Why not just call it a day? After all, “turn” is already the term for 10 minutes in the dungeon. Why redefine it?

It’s because D&D is a game, and a game needs turns. In a game, at the end of your turn, you cede control to the next player… in this case, the DM.

During the players’ turn, the players initiate all the actions. They open doors. They enter hexes. The DM can still react, of course, possibly with deadly effect. Traps might be sprung. An entire battle (at ten rounds to the turn), with the players and the DM’s monsters alternating actions, might take place, all during the players’ turn. But generally the players are walking around and messing with static monsters on a map.

At the end of the players’ turn, the DM gets to do some initiating. Both inside and outside, the term “turn” is defined by monster checks. In other words, after the players have a chance to move, the DM has the opportunity to introduce “wandering monsters” – moving monsters which force the players to react for a change. If we step back and think of D&D as a board game, and the DM and the players as adversaries (and many passages in OD&D suggest that they are!), we might imagine D&D as an asymetric game, sort of like Descent, in which the “Overlord” is explicitly give a turn and limited agency to play evil tricks on the players, or maybe like Dungeon World with its advancing evil fronts.

The “turn” becomes less and less important in later editions, but it’s emphasized several times in OD&D. And I can see how it can be useful. In later editions, the DM is often expected to play a pretty reactive roll. After designing the adventure, the DM sometimes does little more than run monsters and adjudicate traps and puzzles. But it’s useful to explicitly give the DM a turn every once in a while, after, say, ten minutes of dungeon exploration, or a day of overland travel, to check for wandering monsters; take a minute to think about what the bad guys are up to; or think of new challenges to throw at the players.

8 Responses to “the implicit DM’s turn in OD&D”

  1. Shieldhaven says:

    I like where you’re going with this; it’s connected in a lot of ways to some of my thinking on non-combat challenges. One of the central issues with 4e’s skill challenges is that once the situation begins, it is essentially static – there is no defined opportunity for the DM to introduce new challenges or make things worse, unless that specific skill challenge has been written to include a turning point.

  2. Steve says:

    While that’s an interesting take, I don’t think it follows the how D&D got started. It was originally a miniatures wargame similar to Warhammer Fantasy Battle or Warhammer 40k. However, the players each took on a persona of one of the miniatures on one side and the DM took the other side. Thus, all the players moved and took their actions then the DM moved and took his actions. As the game moved from the sandbox table to the dining room table, the moves switched to moving a chit on the Outdoor Survival map as the group wandered the wilderness. Once they found a castle or dungeon, the scale changed to the miniatures and drawn or hastily put together halls and rooms. Thus, if we’re reading through the old original books, we have to remember that Arneson and Gygax and Kuntz and that crowd were wargamers for years before they became roleplayers.

  3. Alan Kellogg says:

    Don’t think of the GM as a player, think of him as a presenter. He does play roles, but more as part of his role as presenter than as participant. As the presenter he doesn’t so much play, as he provides the players with situations, support cast, and extras.

  4. Michael (Gronan) Mornard says:

    Holy Crap, are people who weren’t there ever willing to pontificate about how D&D started!

    First, remember that it started as a game with two sides, Good and Evil. After the Good players whooped on the Evil players all the Evil players switched to Good. Nobody wanted the game to stop so Dave started playing the Evil guys and being the referee too.

    That’s what he told me himself.

  5. Michael (Gronan) Mornard says:

    Paul, if you want to know more about the psychology of early games, buy Rob Kuntz’ “Bottle City” from Black Blade.

    Rob spends a fair amount of time talking specifically about WHY he did things.

  6. paul says:

    So it sounds like I’m right :-)

    Is Bottle City out? I can’t find it on black blade or amazon.

  7. Linebeck says:

    This is a very important insight into why turns are so weird In OD&D. In the real world each player of the game gets a turn, and then the dealer gets a turn, and that’s a round. In D&D we have this automatic assumption that turns consist of a number of rounds. But what does that actually mean?

    In OD&D we are told that in dungeon exploration a turn is ten minutes and that ten combat rounds equal a turn. What? It makes no sense – especially given that the set up of a round of combat lasting a lugubrious minute is described in the text as fast and furious.

    So what gives? The answer is that the question is when does the Game-master get to take his turn. And what does his turn consist of? Rolling the wandering monster die.

    If you think of it that way, then the abstracted nature of a turn makes more sense. As does how empty dungeons are in the original rules. It also aids in dissolving some the odd inconsistencies with timing in the old books which gygax admittedly doubled down on.

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