MAPS - Spaghetti Layouts and Bad Decisions

MAPS - Spaghetti Layouts and Bad Decisions

Show Notes

The hosts have surprisingly practical discussion: maps in tabletop RPGs and why so many of them just don't work. At their core, maps aren't just visuals. They help players navigate, understand space, and engage with the world. But not all maps serve the same purpose. Some guide movement, some highlight important features, and others exist purely for combat or immersion. But there are so many ways that maps can go wrong.

Maps should be built around intent and scale. A single room, a dungeon, a city, and a world map all need different levels of detail and serve different roles. Treating them the same is where things fall apart. At the room level, simplicity wins. You don't need perfect art, but provide just enough detail to support the scene. A few objects, a clear focal point, and something interesting to discover can turn even a basic box map into something memorable. But every detail you include matters because players will assume it's important.

Dungeons scale that idea up. They're just collections of rooms, but they need to make sense. Layout, distance, and flow all affect gameplay, especially when combat, stealth, or noise comes into play. A good dungeon map isn't just connected rooms; it's a space that feels intentional and playable. City maps shift focus again. You don't need every building, just the parts players care about. A few landmarks, key districts, and notable locations are enough to give the city identity without overwhelming the table. And at the largeer scales the advice is simple: don't overbuild. Focus on major features and let the rest grow as the campaign does. Players won't see most of it anyway.

The takeaway is clear: maps don't need to be perfect but they do need to be useful. Whether you're sketching quick shapes or using advanced tools, the goal is always the same: help your players understand the world and make interesting decisions inside it.

Key Takeaways
  • Maps serve multiple roles in tabletop RPGs including navigation, immersion, combat clarity, and storytelling
  • Not all maps are created equal and design depends heavily on scale such as room, dungeon, city, region, and world
  • Good map design starts with intent and what the map is meant to help players do
  • Overly detailed maps can mislead players because anything visible will be treated as important
  • Simple maps can work effectively when supported by clear description and purpose
  • A strong room design includes set dressing, a focal point, and a hidden or revealed element
  • Dungeon maps should make logical and mechanical sense including layout, sound distance, and flow
  • Hallways and room placement directly impact encounter design and player strategy
  • City maps should focus on landmarks, districts, and important locations rather than every building
  • Regional and world maps should prioritize major features such as mountains, rivers, and capitals
  • Players rarely explore everything so maps should focus on likely points of interaction
  • Maps can enhance immersion in virtual tabletop play but may hinder roleplay if overused
  • Pre-made maps can inspire encounters but may require improvisation to match the scene
  • Tools like Dungeon Alchemist, Inkarnate, and Dungeon Scrawl can speed up map creation
  • The best maps are not the most detailed but the ones that support gameplay and storytelling effectively

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Meet the Hosts
  • Tyler Kamstra – Master of mechanics, seeing the Pathfinder action economy like Neo in the Matrix.

  • Randall James – Lore buff and technologist, always ready to debate which Lord of the Rings edition reigns supreme.

  • Ash Ely – Resident cynic, chaos agent, and AI's worst nightmare, bringing pure table-flipping RPG podcast energy.

Join the RPGBOT team where fantasy roleplaying meets real strategy, sarcasm, and community chaos.

How to Find Us:

In-depth articles, guides, handbooks, reviews, news on Tabletop Role Playing at RPGBOT.net

Tyler Kamstra Ash Ely Randall James Producer Dan

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