hawkeyefan
Legend
I'm curious as to how you think he can? In the games I've been discussing, I've been told that if the player gets true success then he gets exactly what he wanted. I'm not seeing where that leaves room for DM input on what a success actually means?
I was talking about D&D. I don’t know if the player gets to decide what exactly happens when they achieve a success. They very well may, but I think the system leaves a lot of room for interpretation to step in such that different DMs will handle it different ways.
For example, in an actual game I played in, we were routinely prompted to make perception checks. We weren’t always told why, just that the roll was needed. Then, after the roll, the DM told us qhat we noticed.
Where does player authorship or player agency come into this?
What renders this cool and well thought-out player authored motivation significantly less meaningful, is that the player has the ability to author solution to their quest any moment they want.
This quote that your argument relies upon shows a misunderstanding of the situation. You’ve picked up this error and run with it.
Manbearcat here realized the consequences of having a player be able to author the solution to their problems and it's why he refused to call it authorship. My posts since then have been about showing that it is actually authorship - because if it is then this criticism still stands.
If you think that what @Manbearcat is doing here is some kind of semantics game, you’re sorely mistaken. He has clearly made a distinction for authorship being one that is decided by fiat. Meaning no roll is needed, no approval from the other participants, etc. Authorship is where the player says “X is true” and so it is.
You’ve discarded the distinction he’s made (authorship is by fiat), and replaced it with your own (success however obtained is authorship) and now you’re arguing against your own mistake.
If you sincerely thibk there’s no difference between a player declaring something is true and a player attempting an action to determine if something is true, then you need to make a compelling argument on why. You can’t just say there’s no distinction and then pat yourself on the back.