Character Sheets (and the like)
Oct 14, 2018 18:25:21 GMT -5
Post by mojobob on Oct 14, 2018 18:25:21 GMT -5
I'll kick this off with some of the character sheets I've designed for my own games.
These, and all my other roleplaying-related blather (campaign journals and what-not) can be found at mojobob.com/roleplay/roleplay.html
mojobob.com/roleplay/AD&DcharacterSheet2016.pdf <== This is a redesign of the first AD&D character sheet I made in CorelDraw 2 when I got my first computer in 1990. I'm better at it now, though I'm still using CorelDraw (X7).
mojobob.com/roleplay/4-page-A4.pdf <== This one is a four-page design intended to be printed double-sided as a folded booklet (Acrobat does this automatically, if you let it). This file is sized to be printed A3 and folded down to A4 size. You can auto-size it in Acrobat to print on A4 and fold down to A5, but of course there will be less room to write everything.
mojobob.com/roleplay/A5_simplesheet.pdf <== Here's a super-simple A5 (landscape) character sheet. You can print two of these on an A4 sheet, or you could print it bigger, or you could print just one on A4 and then fold it into a tent-fold booklet. Really, the possibilities are endless.
mojobob.com/roleplay/DMCharacterRecordSheet1e.pdf <== Here's a simple GM's record sheet for keeping track of the important information about the PCs. 4 characters to the page.
mojobob.com/roleplay/dnd5e/Fitz_5e_Spellbook.pdf <== this is an A5 folded booklet spellbook, for recording details of spells known (name, casting time, components, notes).
mojobob.com/roleplay/Fitz_Spellbook_A4Landscape.pdf <== This is another spellbook, this time in A4 landscape format, with a bit more room to write notes about material components or whatever else you might think is important to remember. There's room to record details for 25 spells on each page, depending on how verbose you are with your note-taking.
mojobob.com/roleplay/Character%20Generation%20Wheel%20-%20AD&D.pdf <== This is the character creation form I use for making new PCs for my campaign. It's not a character sheet, just a character creation aid. I like this system because it allows a reasonable degree of freedom of choice when it comes to selecting character class and what-not, and produces (in the main) fairly useful characters without pouring out a never-ending string of superheroes. Exceptional characteristics aren't all that rare, but they're rare enough to be special.
These, and all my other roleplaying-related blather (campaign journals and what-not) can be found at mojobob.com/roleplay/roleplay.html
mojobob.com/roleplay/AD&DcharacterSheet2016.pdf <== This is a redesign of the first AD&D character sheet I made in CorelDraw 2 when I got my first computer in 1990. I'm better at it now, though I'm still using CorelDraw (X7).
mojobob.com/roleplay/4-page-A4.pdf <== This one is a four-page design intended to be printed double-sided as a folded booklet (Acrobat does this automatically, if you let it). This file is sized to be printed A3 and folded down to A4 size. You can auto-size it in Acrobat to print on A4 and fold down to A5, but of course there will be less room to write everything.
mojobob.com/roleplay/A5_simplesheet.pdf <== Here's a super-simple A5 (landscape) character sheet. You can print two of these on an A4 sheet, or you could print it bigger, or you could print just one on A4 and then fold it into a tent-fold booklet. Really, the possibilities are endless.
mojobob.com/roleplay/DMCharacterRecordSheet1e.pdf <== Here's a simple GM's record sheet for keeping track of the important information about the PCs. 4 characters to the page.
mojobob.com/roleplay/dnd5e/Fitz_5e_Spellbook.pdf <== this is an A5 folded booklet spellbook, for recording details of spells known (name, casting time, components, notes).
mojobob.com/roleplay/Fitz_Spellbook_A4Landscape.pdf <== This is another spellbook, this time in A4 landscape format, with a bit more room to write notes about material components or whatever else you might think is important to remember. There's room to record details for 25 spells on each page, depending on how verbose you are with your note-taking.
mojobob.com/roleplay/Character%20Generation%20Wheel%20-%20AD&D.pdf <== This is the character creation form I use for making new PCs for my campaign. It's not a character sheet, just a character creation aid. I like this system because it allows a reasonable degree of freedom of choice when it comes to selecting character class and what-not, and produces (in the main) fairly useful characters without pouring out a never-ending string of superheroes. Exceptional characteristics aren't all that rare, but they're rare enough to be special.