claim that [MENTION=42582]pemerton[/MENTION]'s addition of the Wizards of High Sorcery to Greyhawk is a poor GMing decision (it's been a few pages, so, I'm not 100% sure on the quote, but, I believe that's correct in essence). Now, why do you claim that? Is it because WoHS thematically don't fit in Greyhawk? Well, that doesn't seem to be the issue, and, frankly, adding a cabal of moon worshipping wizards that draw power from the existing moons plus a moon only they can see, that hunts down other wizards to establish their dominance in the land seems a pretty decent fit to the setting AFAIC. Is it that WoHS have mechanical issues? Are they too powerful for the setting? Well, again, that doesn't seem to be the issue. The mechanics for WoHS seem pretty balanced on the whole, so, not seeing a problem here.
No, the issue is that he's made a poor GMing decision based solely on your personal preference for setting canon. It's not based on his preferences at all, because, well, obviously he's not having a problem with it.
I've already said more than once that the name Wizards of High Sorcery evokes images and thoughts of Krynn, which when on Greyhawk can cause issues. That's the reason, not canon.
I don't see the difference between
because canon and
because evokes non-canonical thoughts and images that are canonical for another setting.
Also, you
still have not addressed the point that, while such evocations may (i) occur to you and your fellow players, and (ii) be an issue for you, you have no evidence that (i) they occurred to my players, nor that (ii) they caused any issue. And, in fact, all the evidence is that they caused no issue, given the number of WoHS PCs in that particular campaign.
Now, does it also mess up canon? Yes. Adding something from another setting messes up canon, but it's okay to mess with canon. I've never said messing with canon is a bad thing. I've just said that if you mess with it too much, the setting ceases to be the canon setting and becomes an alternate universe, which I've also said is fine.
It's great to be reassured that what I'm doing is fine!
You haven't explained, though, why it is an "alt universe" in any interesting or distinctive sense. Other than that your personal "canon meter" is triggered. But that does not seem like a very generalisable measure.
Having an opinion on good or bad is not the same as trying to get someone else to change their game.
You didn't express an opinion on "good or bad". You didn't say (simply) that you wouldn't care for it. You said it was a
very poor GMing decision. That is not just an expression of your preferences for how settings are handled in your RPGing. It's a judgement about whether or not I did a good job in my RPGing. You don't get to make that sort of judgement and then hide behind "Hey, it's just my opinion, man."
EDIT: I just saw this post:
What's the end goal here? It's certainly not to simply discuss canon. If that was true, then value judgements wouldn't be a part of it. And it's certainly not simple curiousity as well. So, why? What's in it for you? Why insist that someone else's game, that you're not playing in, will never play in, and will likely never have any direct link to, be labeled according to your standards?
Good question.
And I would add - it's not just about value judgements. It's not just "I don't think I'd enjoy that". It's the applying of standards -
very poor GMing. That's not just an expression of preference, or even of value. It's about criticising someone else's actions. The only basis for the criticism I can see that it is some sort of universal principle that one shoudn't use Krynn icons in a GH game. And I don't see how that principle can be asserted on any basis other than some sort of canon purity.
(I also don't see how that principle can possibly be asserted for a game that has Aragorn-rangers with their palantirs, King Kong and Wonderland in demi-planes, gates to Mars/Barsoom, etc. But that's a different point.)