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Grab your juice boxes and initiative trackers—it’s time to run D&D for the most chaotic party of all: children.
In this RPGBOT.Masterclass Remastered episode, the hosts are joined by educator and Dungeon Master David Lemke, who shares his expertise on running tabletop RPGs—particularly Dungeons & Dragons—for children. The conversation blends pedagogical insight with practical game mastering advice, offering tools, tips, and examples from David's real-world experience leading kid-friendly adventures. From session structure and tone to safety and engagement strategies, this episode equips GMs of all levels with the knowledge they need to run rewarding, responsible games for younger players.
David Lemke
RPGBOT.Podcast Episodes
Topics Covered
Key Questions Answered
Structure and Consistency Are Crucial Children thrive with predictable session formats, recurring NPCs, and simple mechanics introduced in layers.
Fun Comes First Prioritize engagement and joy. Mechanics can wait—story, agency, and laughter are more important than perfect rules compliance.
Rules Can Be Training Wheels Simplified rulesets or modified stat blocks help children feel empowered without cognitive overload.
Session Length Matters Games for younger players are typically best kept to 60–90 minutes, with physical movement or breaks built in.
Age-Appropriate Themes Tone down horror, violence, and complex moral ambiguity. Focus on problem-solving, teamwork, and simple, heroic stakes.
Incorporate Physicality Props, dice towers, maps, and miniatures provide tactile feedback and keep attention focused.
Safety Tools Aren’t Just for Adults Use check-ins, “stop” mechanics, and clear expectations for behavior to build a safe, inclusive table.
Behavior = Feedback Disruptive behavior is often a sign that the pacing or content needs adjusting, not that the child is “bad at D&D.”
Parental Involvement Helps Keeping parents informed and engaged (or even including them at the table) helps build trust and supports continuity.
Roleplay Builds Life Skills Improv, empathy, decision-making, and consequence are all transferable life lessons baked into the game.
If you enjoy the show, please rate and review us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app. It’s a quick, free way to support the podcast, and helps us reach new listeners.
If you love the show, consider joining us on Patreon, where backers at the $5 and above tiers get ad free access to RPGBOT.net and the RPGBOT.Podcast, can chat directly to members of the RPGBOT team and community on the RPGBOT.Discord, and can join us for live-streamed recordings.
Support us on Amazon.com when you purchase products recommended in the show at the following link: https://amzn.to/3NwElxQ
How to Find Us:
In-depth articles, guides, handbooks, reviews, news on Tabletop Role Playing at RPGBOT.net
Tyler Kamstra4.7
7777 ratings
Grab your juice boxes and initiative trackers—it’s time to run D&D for the most chaotic party of all: children.
In this RPGBOT.Masterclass Remastered episode, the hosts are joined by educator and Dungeon Master David Lemke, who shares his expertise on running tabletop RPGs—particularly Dungeons & Dragons—for children. The conversation blends pedagogical insight with practical game mastering advice, offering tools, tips, and examples from David's real-world experience leading kid-friendly adventures. From session structure and tone to safety and engagement strategies, this episode equips GMs of all levels with the knowledge they need to run rewarding, responsible games for younger players.
David Lemke
RPGBOT.Podcast Episodes
Topics Covered
Key Questions Answered
Structure and Consistency Are Crucial Children thrive with predictable session formats, recurring NPCs, and simple mechanics introduced in layers.
Fun Comes First Prioritize engagement and joy. Mechanics can wait—story, agency, and laughter are more important than perfect rules compliance.
Rules Can Be Training Wheels Simplified rulesets or modified stat blocks help children feel empowered without cognitive overload.
Session Length Matters Games for younger players are typically best kept to 60–90 minutes, with physical movement or breaks built in.
Age-Appropriate Themes Tone down horror, violence, and complex moral ambiguity. Focus on problem-solving, teamwork, and simple, heroic stakes.
Incorporate Physicality Props, dice towers, maps, and miniatures provide tactile feedback and keep attention focused.
Safety Tools Aren’t Just for Adults Use check-ins, “stop” mechanics, and clear expectations for behavior to build a safe, inclusive table.
Behavior = Feedback Disruptive behavior is often a sign that the pacing or content needs adjusting, not that the child is “bad at D&D.”
Parental Involvement Helps Keeping parents informed and engaged (or even including them at the table) helps build trust and supports continuity.
Roleplay Builds Life Skills Improv, empathy, decision-making, and consequence are all transferable life lessons baked into the game.
If you enjoy the show, please rate and review us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app. It’s a quick, free way to support the podcast, and helps us reach new listeners.
If you love the show, consider joining us on Patreon, where backers at the $5 and above tiers get ad free access to RPGBOT.net and the RPGBOT.Podcast, can chat directly to members of the RPGBOT team and community on the RPGBOT.Discord, and can join us for live-streamed recordings.
Support us on Amazon.com when you purchase products recommended in the show at the following link: https://amzn.to/3NwElxQ
How to Find Us:
In-depth articles, guides, handbooks, reviews, news on Tabletop Role Playing at RPGBOT.net
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