TheUltramark
First Post
I have an interesting turn around for this.
Some years ago, I was running a game (2e D&D, as I recall) and threw a manticore at the party. One of the players cried foul stating that manticores don't exist in the terrain where the party was adventuring. He was, in fact, correct by the rules.
So, what should I have done as DM? Should I have stopped the encounter and rewritten it with a setting appropriate creature? After all, this is precisely what you are doing with the Prone Snake question - changing the game based on one person's sense of believability.
So, again, I ask, what should I have done? Or is it only DM's who are allowed to veto player options when their sense of disbelief is violated?
you seem to be not comparing the like terms
the crybaby players are similar in the two stories. As are the placing of the manticore and the snake ruling. You seem to be comparing the ruling with the player in your game that complained.
To answer your question, what should I have done, there are several options, and the one that is normally done at your table should be given the nod. At our table, when I dm, I allow the player to make a case, see what the other players generally think, and then make a ruling. If the players cries, but nobody else at the table cares either, then we are definitely moving on.