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{{Useful Notes|wppage=Gamemaster}}
{{quote|''"In [[Dungeons
Most [[Tabletop Games|Tabletop RPGs]] isolate one player from the rest to fill the role of the Game Master (or GM), comprising four major "hats" to wear:
* ''Author'': The GM plans out ([[
* ''Director'': During the game, while each of the other players typically controls the actions of ''one'' of the Player Characters, the GM decides the actions of all the NPCs as they are needed. The GM may also direct a particular "NPC" that travels with the party (commonly known as a [[GMPC]]), but this may occasionally be open to abuse since the
* ''Referee'': In most [[Tabletop RPG
* ''Manager'': The least officially prescribed portion of GMing, and thus the part that takes people the most by surprise. The GM is typically the one to organize the game in the first place, find players, schedule sessions, and figure out a place to play, as well as acting as a mediator and having to balance the needs and desires of all
Often, the GM is separated from the other players at the table by a cardboard screen that hides his notes on NPCs and upcoming events in the story; many games print custom GM screens, decorated with various tables and charts from the rulebooks, to reduce the amount of book referencing needed during play. Such screens have become less
Game Masters will often be practiced actors, and many of the better GMs are also talented vocal artists and
The Game Master may encourage a variety of game styles (ranging from dice-heavy hack-and-slash to semi-freeform roleplaying) and moods (ranging from the [[Killer Game Master|sadistic and adversarial]] to [[Monty Haul|loot raining from the heavens]]).
Not to be confused with General Motors. Unless you're running some sort of automobile centered RPG. Note that the GMs in MMO Games (RPG or otherwise) are more like ''moderators'' with punitive powers but no ability to change the fundamentals of the game itself. They're the cops, in other words, whereas a Tabletop GM is the ruling deity of his or her world.
Renaming the Game Master is a popular option to add a dash of custom flavor to a game:
* "Referee" was the original term, as used in the very first version of ''[[Dungeons
* "Dungeon Master", or "DM", in ''[[Dungeons
* "Star Master", or "SM", in ''Space Opera'' by Fantasy Games Unlimited.
* "Storyteller", in ''[[
* "Storyguide", in Atlas Games' ''[[
* "Ghostmaster" in West End's ''Ghostbusters'' game.
* "Hollyhock God" in ''Nobilis''.
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* The Board Games Hero Quest and Descent both cast the Dungeon Master as the Heroes' actual antagonist, the former as the [[Big Bad]] (Zargon or Morcar, depending on where you bought the game) and the latter as the Monster of the Week, called the Overlord.
** However, Descent's ''Road to Legend'' supplement has the Overlord act much more like a traditional [[Evil Overlord]], with evil minions and a plot beyond "kill the other players".
* "Animator" in ''[[Toon (
* "Game Control" or "GC" in ''Spycraft''
* The "Aedile" in [[FATAL]].
* "Host" in ''[[Ironclaw]]'', ''Jadeclaw'', and other games from Sanguine
* The '70s third-party supplement vendor, [[Judges Guild]], got its name from the assumption that the DM was the game's "Judge," but it never caught on as a generic term.
** Yet they still insist on calling the DM that even today, in a rather [[Anvilicious]] manner. They really don't ever give up, do they?
** Though TSR themselves used it as a term for the GM of their ''Marvel Super-Heroes'' role-playing game.
* "Director" in the RPG adaptations of ''Buffy'', ''Angel'', and ''Army Of Darkness''.
* In ''Castles and Crusades'', they use the term "Castle Keeper."
* "Marshal" in ''Deadlands''.
* "[[Exactly What It Says
* The "Nightmare Weaver" in [http://1d4chan.org/wiki/Panic Panic].
* "Zero Meister" in Spaceship Zero.
* The 1980's company "Pacesetter" (currently out of business) always came up with a term that would fit the initials CM. For their horror game ''Chill'', it was "Chill Master", ''Star Ace'' games were run by a "Campaign Master", and ''Timemaster'' had the "Continuum Master".
* "Dispatcher" in the Ninja Burger RPG (second edition). Though, in this game, the GM takes on a more proactive role in the game and is an actual party member for all intents and purposes.
* [[
* [[
* The ''[[
* ''[[Call of Cthulhu (tabletop game)]]'' and all related games use "Keeper."
* The CRPG themed "Console" and "Super Console" calls him the "CPU".
* "Game Master" in [[Rifts]] and other Palladium systems.
* "Gamesmaster" in [[Warhammer
* "Host" in ''[[Castle Falkenstein]]'', to maintain the 19th century drawing-room atmopsphere. Similarly, a PC is a "Dramatic Persona".
* "Overseeer" in Fallout Pen and Paper.
* "Master of Ceremonies" (MC) in ''Apocalypse'' and some of its derivatives.
{{reflist}}
[[Category:Tabletop
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