Storyteller Resources is a 31-page book of cheat sheets, tables and quick references to the mechanics in the fifth edition of Vampire: The Masquerade (also known as V5). As its title implies, it's a resource book made specifically to help Storytellers prepare and run their own games of V5, from one-shot sessions to full-length chronicles, as smoothly as possible.
The book begins with a tabletop RPG consent checklist you can use to list any and all sensitive themes in your game (e.g. violence, sex, discrimination, etc.) and note which themes your players will be comfortable and/or uncomfortable with. For example, some players will be used to explicit violence and death but will be opposed to torture and/or sexual assault which is understandable. This checklist is useful to establish everyone's boundaries and make sure that your game doesn't deeply upset and/or offend your players.
The rest of the book features a checklist for player character creation and quick references to character Backgrounds, clan Banes and Compulsions, blood Resonances, Predator Types, Discipline powers, Blood Sorcery rituals, Oblivion ceremonies, loresheets and bloodlines. All of this can be useful to look up the rules of certain mechanics without having to refer to a certain sourcebook.
Finally, this book also contains a couple of sheets to track your player characters' stats (e.g. Health, Willpower, Hunger, Humanity, etc.) and relationships as well as their coterie's domain stats (e.g. Chasse, Lien, Portillon, etc.), haven stats (e.g. dots and Backgrounds) and Chronicle Tenets. This can be helpful to make sure that you're paying attention to your players' characters and their actions.
Personally, I'm very grateful for this book to have been made, especially in a printable format, because it helps Storytellers of all levels of experience keep up-to-date with the rules of V5 and the stats of your players' characters. Furthermore, I think this book is reasonably sized with each category of mechanics (e.g. physical combat, social combat, etc.) being written on one page.
My only complaint is that some of the pages (e.g. the consent checklist, the tracking sheets, etc.) were edited in landscape format, meaning that you have to tilt your head sideways by 90 degrees just to read it on a computer screen. Thankfully, you can get around this problem by printing out these pages, turning them sideways and filling them in at your own pleasure. Still, it would've been nice if the non-printer friendly version of this book was formatted consistently.
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