![]() ![]() ![]() I can go back and do that easily enough, though.īy the by, if an image doesn’t fit into the Scrivener pane, you can resize it with a right-click. Hm: I should also have set up a folder in the Research area for level 1. Since this’ll just be one level I don’t really need the folder, but you get the principle. I’m using one folder per level, and a different document for each encounter. The map is down in the research area, and I’ve added a folder and a document to the draft area. The left pane of the window is the Binder it’s where all the pieces of the project live. ![]() There’s the map again, inside the Scrivener project window. First interesting feature of the program: every project (which is what it calls a document) has a Research folder, and you can stuff text, images, PDFs, and Web pages into that folder. I’ll grab a map from the great collection of dungeon maps at Paratime Design - let’s use this one.Īnd now I’ll dump it into Scrivener. We’ll say it’s going to be a single level for now, and I’ll aim it at my current group, which just hit 4th level. So I want to slam together a quick dungeon for D&D 4e, henceforth known as the Descent Into The Doomful Depths. I think it’s awesome for pen and paper gaming work, and I wanted to document my current workflow with an extended example. You use it to outline, shuffle, and put down words. It’s oriented towards the writing process you don’t use it to format text and produce final output. I recently got a new text processing program called Scrivener. ![]()
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January 2023
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