The Game Master’s Handbook of Proactive Roleplaying
Authors: Jonah and Tristan Fishel Publisher: Media Lab Books Pages: 240 Published: October 17, 2023 ISBN: 978-1-956403-44-2
Overview
A framework for shifting TTRPG play from GM-driven storylines to player-driven goal pursuit. Players declare goals and the GM creates obstacles — inverting the traditional reactive model into a proactive one where players “think about what their characters want, strategize on how to get there, and gleefully blow through all the barriers the Game Master puts in their way.”
Role in The Western Horizon
Primary Scale: Meta/Framework (applies to all scales) Used For: Goal-driven play structure, faction clock mechanics, encounter design philosophy Key Sections: Goals Over Hooks, Factions, Quest Prep, Player Guide Engine Connection: Seeds and the Focal Quest — player goals are the seeds that trigger the collapse
Core Philosophy
The Problem with Reactive Play
- Creative burden falls on the GM — players just show up
- Player passivity — they assume “the story will come to them”
- Creative rut — every campaign becomes “stop the world-ending threat”
- Diminished agency — players choose between GM-provided options
The Proactive Solution
- Players declare what their characters want
- GM creates obstacles and opposition (not storylines)
- Factions pursue their own goals, creating emergent conflict
- Story emerges from the collision of competing goals
Core Mechanics
Player Goals
The foundation of proactive play. Each PC needs multiple goals:
| Property | Description | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Player-authored | Players invent goals, not the GM | — |
| Multiple | 3 goals per PC recommended | Short, medium, long-term |
| Specific & achievable | Clear end point you can recognize | ”Win the tournament in Songul” not “become more powerful” |
| Consequential | Failure matters | ”…so Su-Li will marry me” |
| Non-repeatable | Can’t just try again if you fail | Stakes must be real |
| Fun to pursue | Can imagine obstacles | Level-appropriate challenges |
Design characters backward: Come up with fun goals first, then design a character around those goals. See Player Guide for the full goal-creation procedure.
Factions as “The GM’s Party”
Each faction needs identity, area of operation, power level, ideology, and concrete goals. Critical: faction goals must relate to the same people, places, and events as PC goals. This ensures collision.
See Factions for how WH extends this with the full goal and clock system.
Faction Clocks (from Blades in the Dark)
Circle divided into segments. Fill a segment when a faction makes progress. When full, goal is achieved. Clocks advance between sessions, creating emergent pressure.
NPCs by Role
| Type | Relationship | Goal Alignment |
|---|---|---|
| Allies | Beneficial partners | Goals align with PCs |
| Villains | Opposition | Goals conflict with PCs |
| Patrons | Resource providers | Transactional — help in exchange for advancing patron’s goals |
Key insight for villains: Design villain goals in response to player goals. The villain’s goals must overlap with PC goals or players will never care about them.
Key Procedures
The Seven-Step Encounter Design
- Review player goals — what are they working on?
- Identify overlapping faction goals — which factions care about the same things?
- Pick opposing NPC goals — specific goals that create obstacles
- Choose location — where does this encounter happen?
- Determine conflict type — combat, social, exploration?
- Determine rewards — what do players get for success?
- Prepare materials
The “+1” Reward Philosophy
When a goal has a built-in reward, add a “+1”: connection to ongoing story, new information about another goal, complications or consequences, rights or relationships.
This maps to the Five Room Structure’s Resolution beat — the payoff plus the seed.
Integration with The Western Horizon
Two Modes of Content
| Mode | Trigger | Depth |
|---|---|---|
| Hook Seeding | Faction clocks advance | Shallow pointers — lore nodes |
| Content Realization | Player pursues goal | Full generation — Quest Prep |
The Bulletin Board Reconsidered
The bulletin board becomes a window into faction activity, an information marketplace for player goal pursuit, and a fallback for players without clear direction — not the primary source of adventure hooks.
Quick Reference
Player Goal Checklist
- Player-authored (not GM-suggested)
- Specific end point
- Clear consequences for failure
- Non-repeatable
- Fun obstacles imaginable
- Connected to character identity
Faction Goal Checklist
- Concrete and specific
- Overlaps with at least one PC goal
- Has a clock tracking progress
- NPCs assigned to advance it
- Advances between sessions
Last updated: December 2025 Source: Book review and summary, not direct PDF