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As a GM, what kind of techniques could I use to help a player re-join the gaming session after their character dies? I want to avoid any major interruptions to the flow of the adventure. I would also like to avoid having to end the session immediately or making them sit on the side-lines for the rest of the session.

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    \$\begingroup\$ and before this point What about character death should be in the social contract \$\endgroup\$
    – user2102
    Commented Apr 25, 2012 at 12:44
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    \$\begingroup\$ Did you have a specific system in mind? For example, Paranoia characters come in a six pack of clones, and Great Ork Gods characters are penalized if it takes more than a few minutes to reroll one. It is very different in a game like 7th Sea or Dungeons and Dragons. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Apr 8, 2021 at 21:42

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Here are some suggestions that we have tried for our 4e game. It does not come up much as we do not have a high mortality campaign thus far.

  • Have backup characters ready. In 4e we have had backup characters in the character builder ready to be printed if we needed them during a session. This can provide a quick pick up right back to where you left off by just creating some story around the new character(s) and getting them into the game fast. This has an advantage because you may already have some story for the character and why he exists in your world. Keep them leveled with the party and keep the equipped similarly to the character they are replacing.

  • Res the character quickly, maybe even cheaply. This has so far been how we've dealt with character deaths in our game. The one encounter where we had multiple PC deaths was at the very end of an extended encounter. We carried our bodies out and were able to find a local healer who was willing to res our friends for a very small amount of gold compared to what it would have cost out of gratitude for saving the town.

  • Have them fill NPC roles for the rest of the session. This is not something we've tried, but is something I've seen suggested several places and is a good idea for a group in general to keep engagement when characters are off screen. Let your players have the role of an NPC or two for the rest of the session, or just for this interaction, it keeps everyone engaged and it helps take some of the burden off of you as the DM.

I'm sure there are plenty of better solutions, but these are some I've tried or seen floated pretty regularly.

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    \$\begingroup\$ In games with high lethality, I recommend my players build an alternate just for good measure. I also have a small portfolio of NPCs for any awkward moment where a character is needed. As long as the player sits down with you and tells you what they're making a few days before the next session, a quick crank of the plot device puts the new character there. \$\endgroup\$
    – CatLord
    Commented Apr 24, 2012 at 20:57
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    \$\begingroup\$ I believe that Ghostwalk, now including a 3.5 update, gave options for PCs being ghosts. The idea was that it allowed the PC to continue on in death. I may, however, gotten this confused with another, possibly non-cannon, supplement. \$\endgroup\$
    – user2102
    Commented Apr 25, 2012 at 12:43
  • \$\begingroup\$ I researched "ghost play" in Ghostwalk and it indeed gives options for PCs playing ghosts. Although the mechanics are specific to 3E, the concepts can be applied to other systems: Characters may advance (XP-wise) in this ghost class, but not their mortal one; the longer a character stays as a ghost, the harder for them to "go back"; if/when resurrected, they may transfer some of their XP. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Apr 28, 2012 at 15:54
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This varies somewhat by the tone of your campaign and the system/setting.

In some systems/settings, resurrections are relatively easy. In that case, the obvious answer is to perform the resurrection with some sort of minor penalty and then go on. This, though, cheapens character death. In a mostly hack 'n slash, lighthearted game, this is perfectly fine and essentially replicates the feeling of most videogames (you died, now you loose a little bit of progress and get to try again). In a more serious game with a deep story, knowing death is cheap can affect the story (sacraficing your life means a lot less if that life comes back at the price of a little gold and XP or whatever) and knowing it is not just available but cheap will definitely affect the way the characters play. It will make them more likely to take large risks. (again whether that is good or bad depends on what you are going for).

An alternative, again available in some but not all settings is that they come back as a ghost or other undead form. This was interesting in some oWoD games I played, but probably does not work well in say DnD. You have to be in a setting that supports that and it would have to be such that a ghost could integrate without messing up the story, or this becomes a very bad option.

The next option of course is to have backups standing by. This could mean having a new character already generated, or having the player make one quickly while everyone else continues on and then integrating them as soon as ready. This works well in games where character creation is fairly quick, but less well when it takes a while, and it is complicated if the players are expected to make up an elaborate backstory for their character. One way to simplify this, though one that is rarely satisfying, is to let them bring back a variant of their old character. Tweak the name, maybe reassign a skill or two, and tweak the backstory a bit, but basically let them reuse the character that died.

Finally, use deus ex machina to prevent the death. Personally, I hate this option. It seems to cheapen death even more than resurrection, and basically changes what just happened. But as long as it is not overused, it can be a way of saving a character that someone put a lot of time and effort into developping, with a long backstory even in settings where resurrection is just not an option.

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The option that worked better for me (especially during a spell when I made my adventures quite hard and therefore I "killed" characters quite often...) was having each player use and develop a number of different characters at the same time.

If one dies and can't be resurrected, you have the replacement ready...

PS the players understood quite quickly the situation (i.e. if you're not careful, your character will die easily) and in general enjoyed the challenge of really risking losing the character almost at every turn and of developing a fairly broad number of different characters.

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    \$\begingroup\$ Absolutely +1. This has several other advantages besides quick backup and impressing lethality: 1) You - the GM - need not hesitate to punish lethal stupidity appropriately, or giving a heroic character the heroic exist he deserves. Sometimes death is the appropriate result of an activity. 2) The characters need not hesitate to leave the party. Especially in strong character play, there is often the situation where a character would not realistically stay with a group. If the player has a backup char, one character can just take the other road, with the other waiting in the next inn. \$\endgroup\$
    – DevSolar
    Commented Jun 25, 2012 at 14:56
  • \$\begingroup\$ we did this in AD&D and Classic Traveller as a matter of 'best practices" back in the 70's and early 80's. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Apr 9, 2021 at 14:06
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I tend to bring in new PCs who had some sort of relationship with the recently deceased PC. The nature of the relationship will vary, but it has to be strong enough that the new PC has a reason to show up hot on the heels of the death of the old PC. A few highly situation-dependent variations on this theme:

  • Sibling who wants to prove worth to the family by joining
  • Close friend who wanted to come along earlier but couldn't
  • Former enemy who heard PC #1 was in the area and wanted to make amends
  • Messenger with a warning and decides to stay ("Hey, the Guildmaster says Cromius should avoid the... oh, I see. Never mind.").

One good thing about establishing a relationship between the new and old PCs is that it provides a feeling of story continuity and doesn't feel quite as forced as if the new PC came in from completely out of the blue.

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These are some of the things I have done in the past.

  1. Have a humanoid enemy turn coat and join the players.
  2. Allow the player to be a "short term" ghost.
  3. Have the player's essence enter an object but let the team know that soon the essence will be forced out.
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    \$\begingroup\$ Could you give us a bit of why you chose each method and how it worked out? A list is all right, but not particularly helpful if you are trying to make decisions. \$\endgroup\$
    – wax eagle
    Commented Apr 24, 2012 at 23:44
  • \$\begingroup\$ Many of the humanoid races have player stat options and can be player races as well. This option allows the player an immediate lead in if they help to kill the offending murder of the player. The ghost option can really work well if you have great roll players, they will welcome the chance to try and affect the party with little or no actual interaction. Becoming a sentient object the helps the party by attacking with a bonus roll or adding skill rolls that the player had when they were alive this also allows the players persona to continue to help and still be a part of the group. \$\endgroup\$
    – Vethor
    Commented Apr 25, 2012 at 6:02
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As far as Character wise:

  • Have PCs make backups
  • Have sheets made for a few of your NPC characters. Allow the character to take control of an NPC that is a tagalong type (not, perhaps, the archenemy of the story) or support character until session end, then have them make another.
  • Resurrection, as mentioned above
  • Simply have them make a very basic character, without all the fluff, jump in, and then either flesh the character out later / as story goes along, or make a proper one after session.

As far as in-game hooking goes:

  • Again, resurrection - although in my normal setting, PCs don't get resurrection often, and not at lower levels much at all.
  • If you're dungeon crawling, finding a new or remade PC as a prisoner is one of my favorites.
  • An old friend of another PC, or a guild mate, fellow soldier, etc. joining you for X reason (bringing a message, last survivor of their squad, etc)
  • Run into them at the pub (or other relevant place of interaction)
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I'm all for providing a temporary(till end of session) NPC.

  1. Ask the player to think of a short paragraph of how has the character's life and death affected the world. Have them write it down on the character sheet with a non-erasable pen. This is the de-facto death of the character. Morn it, move the character sheet to the Graveyard if you have one else hand it back to the player.

  2. Hand the player one of 4-5 drop-in mini antagonists* you have prepared. The card should hold sections 'combat stats', 'major skills', 'intent'. Deliberately looking not like a character sheet. With immediate general course of action stated in the last section.

  3. After the session do make arrangements with the player to support them with character creation. Have the boring stuff (stats, equipment) finalized before the next session. First half an hour of it everyone works together to weave the past and motivation of the character with that of the existing group (so that their goals are aligned enough to work together but divergent enough to create drama).

Examples (which can happen pretty much anywhere, so are a kind of random encounters; just increase the CR because of the human control):

  • Leader of a bandit strike team.
  • A rogue hired to assassinate one of the PCs.
  • Leader of a pickpocket team.
  • Town guard sergeant reacting to a distress bell.
  • An invisible spy seeking to misdirect them.
    • having several unused villains, helpers, quests, places, items - is my style of DMing. Anytime the party does something I couldn't have reasonably expected, I whip out a random one of those and let the party have fun for half an hour while I am trying to think how to fit THIS NOW into the overarching plot.
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    \$\begingroup\$ Having 4-5 extra characters just in your back pocket seems potentially a fair amount of work in some systems. Have you tried doing these things and can discuss how they've worked and what issues people should be aware of? \$\endgroup\$
    – NotArch
    Commented Apr 8, 2021 at 19:36
  • \$\begingroup\$ @NautArch thanks for the spot-on comment. I somewhat amended the question to answer but please do edit and polish the answer. Basically FOR my style of DMing, having additional villains is zero effort. For dungeon crawers it should be easy as well: villain == next high level enemy. \$\endgroup\$
    – Vorac
    Commented Apr 9, 2021 at 6:50
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There is a lot of technics described above, but are you really sure you want to put a player back in fast? I'd like to mention this once more, because it looks very important to me: easy resurrection might damage role-playing.

In my opinion, quick resurrection (by magic, backup characters, deus ex machina) is appropriate only if the PC have died because of a GM mistake (like, choosing too hard monsters and closing the only door) or a very unfortunate coincidence (maybe caused by an unforseen game system pecularity).

Otherwise, being a player I would find it very fair to have episodic NPC roles for quite a long time, before a character gets resurrected (i.e. after the party works hard to earn a huge sum of money to pay for the spell) or remastered. Gandalf's resurrection in LOTR is a masterpiece. And if it was a game, Gandalf's player could play a not so importrant and detailed, but a somewhat lasting character (Eomer comes to my mind). And, well, you can kill the latter or leave him behind (injured or in love) to resurrect the main character of the player.

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  • \$\begingroup\$ Well, it's an answer on what ways to get a player back are ok, and what may have drawbacks. But I see your point and I'll try to be more close to the rules in future. \$\endgroup\$
    – Steed
    Commented Aug 27, 2012 at 9:40

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