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The worldbuilding ofDungeons & Dragonsis defined as much by the small as the grand scale. Bandits, kobolds, and recent undead all play a big part in making a world of engaging characters and fun combat. Keeping the combat with these low-level enemies can become challenging after a while.
The simplicity of low-level encounters can start to work against the system when players know everything an enemy can do, and it becomes clear that the same CR1/4 grunt has been copy and pasted until the encounter tracker said it was ready. Here’s how to keep the early fights from getting stagnant.

Keep Encounters Varied
One of the more common things that can make low-level combat feel same-y is thatmost creatures play the same. A stack of hitpoints, two attack variations, and perhaps a special ability that forces a level-appropriate saving throw.
A group of five bandits are indistinguishable from each other unless yougive them names and personalities when planning the session. That’s a rathertime-consuming process for characters that might never speak in-gameor lead your characters to believe they’re meant to be diplomatic because you otherwise wouldn’t name them.

There are a couple different approaches to making low-level enemies distinct from one another without needing to spend a lot of prep time.
Example
Adjectives
Give each creature in an encounter a single adjective. You can even put together a random table to save time.This one-word description can influence their strategyand how you describe them to players.
After initiative, you describe thehighest rolling kobold as headstrong. They charge in ahead of the group and are easily caught out of formation.

Different Weapons
You can often swap out the weapon a character wields withminimal change to their stat block. Changing the damage type between
A polearm-wielding guard will deal a different damage type to their club-wielding allies. They can also position themselves differently tomake use of this expanded range.
Weaknesses And Strengths
With some extra prep time you can maketemplates that can be applied to any humanoidenemy to give slight changes to stats.
A gnomish mercenary will have advantage on spell savesbut move slower than a generic human.
Group Strategies
Create circumstances that change how enemies behave in combat. This can also tie into the broader narrative.
A pack of goblins forms a defensive formationaround a prisoner they are escorting.
Applying these variations can also encourage the players to change their approach.A martial character might prioritize the magic-resistant gnomewhile the spellcaster focuses on the polearm-wielding enemy hiding behind other enemies.
Keep A Quick Pace On Weak Encounters
The eventual outcome of many fights in D&D is predetermined and merely aquestion of how much time and resources the party and players will need to spend. You don’t want these fights to linger for a long time.
There are different ways of handling this.
Using Low-Level Encounters At Higher Levels
Once your party is past their low level adventures, this doesn’t mean you get to discard that part of the monster manual. There are plenty of ways tokeep those kobolds and goblins relevant at higher levels.
Method
Reuse Old Encounters To Show Growth
Using an old encounter as it appeared previously helps your party realize how much they’ve improved since then. It’snot a method to be overusedbut can feel impactful if done once or twice in a campaign.
Reuse Old Bosses As New Minions
A staple approach in dungeon-crawling video games is tosave development time by recycling old boss fightsas minions and random encounters at higher levels. This keeps them relevant and felt while still allowing the challenge to progress upward. You might want tostreamline the stat blocks:It’ll slow down the game if random encounters start throwing out legendary actions.
Create Swarms
Using rules from the swarm of rats and other creatures, you may make a high CR creature that represents an army of weaker creatures working together. Allow your level ten fighter the thrill of fighting an entire army of CR 1/4 skeletonswithout the pain of rolling for each individual enemy.
Non-Combat Obstacles
Weaker characters can still make good non-combat obstacles. A party might opt tosneak past a group of low-level minions to avoid alerting their more powerful leader.