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With Respect to the Door and Expectations....The REAL Reason 5e Can't Unite the Base
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<blockquote data-quote="Imaro" data-source="post: 5980052" data-attributes="member: 48965"><p>Why? This sounds like a Mallus preference thing as opposed to anything concrete. I think it's just as important to define one's characters through their successes as it is through their failures... both enlighten others at the table about said character... why should the DM define one but not the other?</p><p> </p><p> </p><p></p><p> </p><p>But why do you decide that for the player? As I said above, how a character fails can be just as, or more important than how he succeeds. I am making the conscious choice to frame the scene in terms of my riding skill... I am an excelllent rider, however that does not mean that my riding skill is infallible. </p><p> </p><p>By letting me shape the fiction of my ride skill failure I show you what my limits are, what I may not have learned about the skill yet (which ties into increasing the rank in it unless I'm 30th level already), and how I cope with the things I have not yet learned in my time as a rider. It also opens up roleplaying possibilities, since I now have the opportunity to react to my failure or success as a rider due to my own knowledge and skill... as opposed to it allways being somebody or something else's fault.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Imaro, post: 5980052, member: 48965"] Why? This sounds like a Mallus preference thing as opposed to anything concrete. I think it's just as important to define one's characters through their successes as it is through their failures... both enlighten others at the table about said character... why should the DM define one but not the other? But why do you decide that for the player? As I said above, how a character fails can be just as, or more important than how he succeeds. I am making the conscious choice to frame the scene in terms of my riding skill... I am an excelllent rider, however that does not mean that my riding skill is infallible. By letting me shape the fiction of my ride skill failure I show you what my limits are, what I may not have learned about the skill yet (which ties into increasing the rank in it unless I'm 30th level already), and how I cope with the things I have not yet learned in my time as a rider. It also opens up roleplaying possibilities, since I now have the opportunity to react to my failure or success as a rider due to my own knowledge and skill... as opposed to it allways being somebody or something else's fault. [/QUOTE]
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With Respect to the Door and Expectations....The REAL Reason 5e Can't Unite the Base
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