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    D&D General D&D's Utter Dominance Is Good or Bad Because...

    I see what you're suggesting. I don't think that's good representation of how people find and chose games to play. Those five variously colored mugs are inside five different cabinets in five different kitchens in five diferent houses, and the people who own them don't necessarily want you to...
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    D&D General D&D's Utter Dominance Is Good or Bad Because...

    The food in this place is lousy, and the servings are too small!
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    D&D General Who “owns” a PC after the player stops using them?

    This thread has jumped the shark. I’m out. I’ll be offline the rest of the day. I have to meet with my lawyers because the authorities discovered that I used to pretend to be Fonzie.
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    D&D General Who “owns” a PC after the player stops using them?

    I'll just point out that you didn't ask my permission to imagine my entire campaign world (and, not incidentally, all my players' PCs in it) to be part of your game universe. :) Fortunately, what you imagine in your game doesn't affect what I and my players imagine in my game, so you're on solid...
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    D&D General Who “owns” a PC after the player stops using them?

    Yes, let's not do that, for all sorts of reasons. (Again, not for the reason that the player "owns" the character.) I don't think you and I are talking about the same type of boundaries at all, so I won't be drilling into this topic any futher.
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    D&D General Who “owns” a PC after the player stops using them?

    I consider my own boundaries to be irrelevant at a game table where I'm not a participant. I don't get this at all.
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    D&D General Who “owns” a PC after the player stops using them?

    Yes, that's true. Perhaps you're responding to someone whose posts I can't read. How does this observation relate to the idea that a player can expect to restrict the imagined game content of others? Or is it unrelated?
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    D&D General Who “owns” a PC after the player stops using them?

    I have to ask -- what does that mean, specifically? What limits can the owner require of others with regard to the player character? Can I tell my friends a story about your PC's adventures from the game last night? Can I make up a story to tell my friends about your PC? Are you the only one...
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    D&D 5E [+]Exploration Falls Short For Many Groups, Let’s Talk About It

    I know you're bowing out, so I'm not saying this in expectation of a response. But ... I never suggested that any activities in D&D have to be played out in real time, much less that the action declarations of the party members during an exploration. I could be wrong, but I don't think anyone...
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    D&D General Who “owns” a PC after the player stops using them?

    Interesting. I've been wrong before -- and I will be again!
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    D&D General Who “owns” a PC after the player stops using them?

    But you do have the right to draw or paint or sculpt the piece yourself and display it in your home. An orignal piece of visual art is not equivalent to a character played in an RPG.
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    D&D General Who “owns” a PC after the player stops using them?

    I'll clarify. In the context of this thread (and of the thread from which this one derived), the concept of ownership of a character is expansive and includes the right to restrict or allow the use of that content in RPG games (hence the "s around owns in this thread's title). At least, that's...
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    D&D General Who “owns” a PC after the player stops using them?

    Oh, I was not speaking of published works. I can draw Gandalf, I can write Lord of the Rings fan-fic, I can run a D&D game using Tolkien's characters and setting. Any ownership of the characters and ideas does not restrict anyone from that.
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    D&D General Who “owns” a PC after the player stops using them?

    Ownership by a creator over an original character does not restrict anyone from drawing that character, writing or telling stories about that character, or using that character in a role-playing game. I don't think that restriction is a reasonable expectation by the creator, especially if left...
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    D&D General Who “owns” a PC after the player stops using them?

    Very clearly, we don't all agree on that. Or at least we don't agree on what rights the purported ownership conveys on the player.
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    D&D General Who “owns” a PC after the player stops using them?

    Because the DM is not the one who expects to restrict other people's imaginary games? It's simple self-interest for the concerned players. If you have that sense of ownership, let other people know. Or be prepared to have that sense of ownership violated by others who have no clue about your...
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    D&D General Who “owns” a PC after the player stops using them?

    This thread demonstrates that the default is not as defaulty as some think it is. For an issue as important to some players as "ownership" of a character is, it behooves the player not to leave it as an unspoken default.
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    D&D 5E [+]Exploration Falls Short For Many Groups, Let’s Talk About It

    You said everyone is telling you something, and then you provided two quotes from one source -- me. I'm making my own points. Please don't think that I represent everyone. I don't, and I'm not trying to. No, I never said any of this was vitally important, but, yes, in certain circumstances what...
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    D&D General Who “owns” a PC after the player stops using them?

    People in this thread have said that they have very serious problems with others using their characters in non-commercial collaborative stories. Don't underestimate what people could or would have problems with. :)
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    D&D General Who “owns” a PC after the player stops using them?

    There are plenty of reasons to comply with a player's wishes regarding the disposition of their characters. This notion that there's a right of ownership that grants a final, indisputable say in the matter is not one of those reasons.
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