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New World of Darkness

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New World of Darkness (nWoD), also known as Chronicles of Darkness(CoD) is the line of games published since 2004 by White Wolf. Not to be confused with Classic World of Darkness.


The games system for playing NWoD games is called the Storytelling System.

Character Sheets

All Roll20 character sheet for NWoD are categorized under "Storytelling System" in the dropdown. Some examples include Exalted 2E & 3E, and "Street Fighter: The Storytelling Game".

Sheet with their own pages:

Generic macros


Old Macros & nWoD guide from 2013
1) nWoD uses the d10, so our rolls will revolve around that. To roll in chat the command is /roll or /r followed by the number of the die type to be rolled.

/r 5d10 will roll five d10s.


2) To represent the “10-again” rule (called “Exploding Dice” in other systems) you add an ! after the die type, like so:

/r 5d10!

The ! symbol denotes the highest result (in this case a 10) as “Exploding,” or “Again.”

2a) Sometimes special rules allow "9-again," where both 9s and 10s explode, or "8-again," where 8s, 9s and 10s explode. To represent other Exploding numbers, we use the Greater Than or Equal To symbol ( > ) after the ! followed by the Exploding number, like so:

/r 5d10!>8

That roll represents 8-again, where 8s, 9s and 10s all explode.


3) nWoD doesn't add up dice rolls, it uses a Target Number system (usually 8.) Every die that comes up greater than or equal to the Target Number is considered a success. We represent that by placing the dice pool roll inside brackets, followed by > and the Target Number, like so:

/r {5d10!}>8

This is 5d10, Ten-Again, with a Target Number of 8. A pretty standard nWoD roll. The output from the roll will inform you of how many die results qualified as successes.

Using what we've learned prior, here's 9-again with a standard Target Number:

/r {5d10!>9}>8


4) In rare instances the game calls for 1s to subtract from successes. In these cases, follow your Target Number with f1, like so:

/r {5d10!}>8f1


5) If you want more advanced ways to keep track of character sheets and leverage the Roll20 system, you can try this. nWoD is a dice pool system. For example: a character has 3 Dexterity and 2 Firearms. He wants to fire a gun, and the gun gives him +2 dice. It's a foggy night which makes it hard to aim, giving him a -3 penalty. This becomes a dice pool of 3+2+2-3, for a total of 4 dice.

Make a character in Roll20. Click on the “Journal” icon in the right sidebar. Next to “Characters” click on “+ Add.”

Go to the section labeled “Attributes.” Click on “+ Add.” Give the Attribute a name and a value. For example, I made a character with two Attributes: Dexterity, with a value of 3, and Firearms, with a value of 2.

Add two more Attributes. I call mine PosMod and NegMod, for positive and negative modifiers. I gave them values of 2 and 3 respectively.

With Attributes for these four variables, I then created an Ability macro that lets me roll a Ranged attack.

Go down to the section labeled “Abilities” and click on “+ Add.” Click on the pencil to edit the Ability. For this example I named mine “Ranged,” to represent a ranged attack.

In the bottom field enter in the macro you want to associate with this Ability. A macro is just a stored command string that you can easily activate later without typing it all out.

We want this Ability to reference the character's Attribute values so it knows how many dice to roll. We do this by telling it to roll (Attribute)d10 instead of giving it a set number of dice to roll.

When typing in your formula, be sure to use the @ symbol to insert your Attribute, then type your next key, then go back and remove the space between the two. The system is a little finnicky and if you don't do it in this manner it may not work. When you're done editing click the green checkmark and then click “Save Changes.”

The final result should look something like this:

/r {(Dexterity+Firearms+PosMod-NegMod)d10!}>8 The end result of this is that it rolls (3+2+2-3)d10, or 4d10, Ten-Again, with a Target Number of 8.

While a little more complicated at first, this system can be greatly beneficial in the long run since you can keep track of character sheets and common rolls will update automatically as the character's traits advance.

There are a few different ways you can roll this Ability: 5a) You can open the character sheet of the character by clicking on his name, then clicking on the die icon next to Ability name. 5b) If you want a quick button for this Ability to appear on your screen, tick the “Show in Macro Bar?” box under the Ability. Be sure that "Show macro quick bar?" is also enabled under settings. 5c) Finally, you can roll the macro directly in chat by typing:

/r %{Name|Ability}


6) Mods can change frequently. You don't have to constantly open up and edit the character every time they do.

Instead, create a token. Associate that token with the character. Associate one of the three available bars with the PosMod Attribute, and another of the bars with the NegMod Attribute. Now, whenever you update the values in those bars on the token, you change the Mod values in use for that character.


See Also