He fell silent. For several moments they all did, and the quiet had the feel of a deliberate thing. Then Eddie said, “All right, we’re back together again. What the hell do we do next?”
― Stephen King, The Dark Tower
RPGs have been A Thing for half a century now. That’s more than enough time for any number of campaigns and gaming groups to have flared to life, burned bright, and then sputtered out. As gamers, we move on, establishing new groups and constructing new campaigns.
But sometimes you want to go back. And why not, if the will is there to try? Whether or not you can recapture the original magic of a scattered group or a fallen campaign, it’s worthwhile to bring back old memories and reunite old friends.
Still, I’m finding that making the reunion happen is more involved than I anticipated. There’s quite a number of steps I need to go through before we can get to the table. The following order is loosely appropriate but has significant room for variation.
- Invite. Depending on the scale of your campaign, getting everyone together might be as simple as texting three or four close friends, or as complex as going through several years’ worth of correspondence to track down dozens of players from your open-table sandbox, some of whom may have strayed to other continents, and others for whom you have no contact information whatsoever.
- Schedule. Do you want a single reunion session? A full weekend of gaming? An ongoing campaign? Whichever you choose, you’ll need to get a sense from everyone involved of when they might be able to play. And for reunion games, your players are going to be older and thus, on average, more tied up with familial or other obligations. You may need to twist some arms to get things narrowed down to a date or schedule that’ll fill your table.
- Recollect. What actually happened during that campaign? Part of what drives an ongoing game is the sense of continuity from session to session, the accumulation of stories and lore that you and your players build up. You’ve probably forgotten a bunch of those stories. If anyone wrote up session summaries, it’s time to reread them. You can also get some of your campaign’s regulars together for dinner or drinks and get them talking about their favorite moments from the game.
- Rummage. Where did you put those campaign notes from ten years ago? It’ll be hard to play again without them. Did you keep them all in one place? Paper notes and maps can get misplaced, whether stashed in the basement or boxed up during a move. Digital material may be archived on an external drive or a half-forgotten wiki. And some of your notes may never turn up at all.
- Reacquaint. Those campaign notes you dug up? You’ll need to read through them and familiarize yourself with material that you’ve lost since forgotten. Dungeons, towns, major NPCs, ongoing events, custom monsters, house rules — you’ll need to relearn much of the information you used to keep in your head.
- Reassess. How good were your ideas from back then? You and your players have had years of actual play since then, and stuff that may have seemed clever at the time may now feel trite. Culture has also shifted; original-flavor D&D and its inspirations have all manner of prejudices baked in that you and your players might have been blind to at the time. You may realize that a character, monster, culture, or other setting element is insensitive. Time to make the necessary adjustments.
- Restock. If you were running a megadungeon or similar environment, odds are that a decent chunk of the dungeon had been cleared out by the PCs and hadn’t yet been restocked. You could leave it that way, but it will probably be more fun for the players if you replenish those areas with monsters and treasure. They’re not going to remember what areas they cleared out, and a reunion game that starts off by wandering through empty room after empty room may feel like a disappointment.
- Extend. This may not apply to more organized or diligent DMs. For my part, I often flew by the seat of my pants and stayed just ahead of the PCs in building out new levels and sub-levels of my megadungeon. Now I’m rusty and I no longer have any idea where the PCs will go next. So I’ll need to find the blank spots on the map and fill in a few more rooms around the edges in case the PCs go there.
- Resurrect. You’ll want to check with everyone in advance to make sure they’ve found their character sheets, and figure out what to do for players whose sheets can’t be found. Online backups are often out of date. Stats may need to be rerolled, unless you feel comfortable guesstimating. Or it might be time for a new character, though that’s a last resort; much of the charm of a campaign reunion comes from bringing back everyone’s old characters for a last hurrah.
- Inform. Now that you’ve got the campaign sorted out in your mind, you need to get everyone else on the same page. Refresh everyone’s memory by summarizing what’s happening in the setting as of now. Fill them in on what’s lined up for the reunion session(s). Be sure to get their input on what they want to do, as this will heavily inform your session prep.
- Advance. You may want to start the reunion game exactly where the original campaign left off. But there are advantages to doing a timeskip. Your players won’t have clear memories of the old status quo, and pushing the timeline forward a few years means their characters can be equally fuzzy on the details. And using a timeskip to tweak characters’ stats and add a bit of history helps get the players re-engaged.
- Play. Self-explanatory!
I’ll be putting together some random tables for the timeskip. Letting the players roll to see whether their characters have picked up stat-reducing battle scars or cool magic items, and whether they’ve gained new hirelings or lost hard-won noble titles! Letting them tell the story of how these things came about should help everyone immerse themselves in our Glantri setting again. Once my tables have been assembled, I’ll post them here. See you then!









What People Say to the Mule