Most of the PFS scenarios when you do a picture export from the PDF will leave those type of details behind as they are on a different layer. I have heard some of the newest scenarios are having issues with those exports although...
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Most of the PFS scenarios when you do a picture export from the PDF will leave those type of details behind as they are on a different layer. I have heard some of the newest scenarios are having issues with those exports although...
Guess now I'm wondering if I can't get those off, or blur them out the group is still going to know exactly where to go lol
Well, if it is on a grid like most of them you can copy another square from nearby and paste it over the top and the grid-lines will hide your photoshop job. If there are shading gradients it makes it more difficult, but still easier than scrubing it out from scratch.
yea, since I bought a Mac I don't really have any editing software, so I was trying to do this old school style :)
Gimp?
Use the clone tool in GIMP. Xorn gives a good overview of how to do it at 2:50 onwards in his map scaling video: https://www.fantasygrounds.com/filel...rescale-1a.wmv
Xorn is using Photoshop but the principle is exactly the same for the clone tool in GIMP.
ZOOOOM.
And a little practice and it will come down a lot.. but it might take a LOT of practice to get it to 90secs :)
Put the source of your clone on the apex of a grid and start your cloning on an apex as well. Then don't lift your finger off the mouse button until you've cloned the whole square (or all of the area you need to clone).
Source meaning? Lets say I have the circular brush. Does the top of that circle or the middle of that circle go at the apex of the grid. I still don't unstained how that won't erase the original grade like in the video...
Ill try the keeping finger held down, never tried that. So I do that to "set the clone" or when "applying the clone"?
More info on the clone tool here: https://docs.gimp.org/en/gimp-tool-clone.html
Clone takes some part of your map (the source) and clones it to somewhere else. As Xorne was doing in the video - he selects a blank portion of the map as the source and then clones this over the section of the map he wants to overwrite with data from the source.
If you set the source as the apex of a grid where there are no GM markings (CTRL+Left Click exactly on the apex with the mouse cursor - you will see cross-hairs appear at the exact point you selected) and then start cloning exactly on an apex where you wish to overwrite with the source (position the mouse cursor exactly on the apex and left-click-and-hold) then move your mouse (still holding the left mouse button down) to cover the extents of the area you wish to overwrite.
I am a PFS GM who, because of a move away from my group and limited mobility issues, is looking to run PFS games using Teamspeak / Fantasy Grounds starting this Winter. Where can I find good practices / basics on getting this Paizo legal accomplished? I saw your posts on the Journal sheets needing to be hand filled, and I am getting tidbits here and there.
Is it advised to get scans of their last chronicle/ equipment logs pre game emailed?
Character sheets in FG2/Hero Lab/.pdf?
What about proof of purchases to make sure they have all the books legal?
I am looking at the Paizo boards too to try and figure this bit out, but so looking forward to it.
Thanks for any pointers / help.
You have to provide a chronicle sheet that is created from the page at the back of the scenario played. As a minimum it must have the session data (the sections highlighted in grey). A lot of FG GMs will fully complete the chronicle sheet - giving the players a complete record. The sheet is provided in electronic format - in such a format that shouldn't allow the player to easily change the data. This is usually a PDF or an image file - it depends on the tools available to you. If you have a PDF application that allows creation of PDF forms and then digitally signing of the PDF (remember to set the PDF to be read-only/locked fields when signing) then this might be the easiest approach. If not, you can make an image file of the page and fill in text through a graphics app - then save as a JPG or similar. Some GMs who have a scanner print out the blank sheets, hand fill them in, scan the sheet and send the scan to the players. It's up to you - as long as the sheet is made from the one in the back of the scenario and has the minimum session data in read-only format.
Most GMs do this - as it will help in filling out the chronicle after the game and give an idea of where the PC is in their PFS "career". This is up to you if you want to review prior to the game, or want it to make creation of the chronicle afterwards easier. Some GMs ask the players to fill out a pre-chronicle before or after the game with all of the details needed to create the end chronicle.
Ask for them in that order of preference. The players should spend the time to put their PC in FG format to enable them to play PFS on FG. You might have to help a newcomer get going, but regular FG players should provide you with their PC in FG importable XML format. It's all about making your job as a GM easier - you have enough to do as it is. Plus, if the player has made the PC in FG they should be at least vaguely familiar with the interface and how their PC will work within FG.
It's very rare for GMs to ask for this. Perhaps if you continually get a specific player who is using feats/abilities/spells from obscure books, and doesn't know how they'd work/can't provide details, then you'd consider privately asking them if they have the relevant books for their PC build.
Thanks for the quick reply Trenloe, that helps.
I have the full version of Acrobat for my research, so the digitally signed PDFs are no problem, nor are scanning hand-filled out sheets. So I am good there.
I am reasonably set up on the FG2 front. I already use it to run a weekly RotRL game with my old gaming group. I also have most of Years 5, 6, and what I have of 7 put in.
I think I am about ready to take this step. :-)
Thanks again.
Thanks for the tracking sheet...it saves and continues to be fillable so the same PDF can continue to be used.
I have difficulty making sense of the OGL and Paizo's community use stuff; sometimes they seem to contradict themselves...
If the PFRPG had its own character sheet with a PFS tab (like 5E does with the AL stuff) and a module where players could drag and drop which scenarios they've completed onto that tab, is that too specific for the usage policies? Or would that be allowed?
I can't imagine why it wouldn't be. It's just a list of stuff you've done, you are supposed to keep track of which scenarios you've played.
is there a pocket guide for activities in character sheets in pdf format or print?
my group and i are new to this game and would like to have something to use as an index for using actions via activities
I hope I'm answering the question you're asking here.
Every character sheet in PF2e has an Activities tab. It usually starts out empty at the beginning of a session, as it seems to be rebuilt from other tabs on the character sheet on load. Once it has populated, it will look something like this.
Attachment 63030
With that tab fully loaded, you can browse through the Activities (organized alphabetically and then by whether they require Training or can be used Untrained). Each Activity has a link button that can be clicked to open a new window with the rules and other information about that Activity, such as when to use a given Activity.
Attachment 63031
It can take a while to scroll through the numerous Skills and their related Activities, so I definitely recommend using the search field at the bottom left of the tab to navigate options quickly.
Attachment 63032