hawkeyefan
Legend
I think referee is simply one of the more handy terms we draw on. I personally use facilitator when I talk about the GM's role in the game. But I do think there is a referee-like thing going on. In that the GM is the arbiter of the rules and the arbiter of the setting. Also a referee is there to enforce the rules of play in sports and to interpret them. That is similar to what a GM does. Johnny tries to use a fireball to make a cat, and the Ref says, no that isn't what fireball does according to the letter and spirit of the rules. But Johnny asks if he can use fireball to light some candles (without damaging anything), a GM might say, that isn't in the letter of the rules, but it follows the spirit of them, so I will allow it. I think that is a kind of refereeing. The big difference is the referee is also more involved in the action. And I think the GM has duties that go well beyond that of a referee in a sport.
I think a lot of the principles that drive fair referee decision, would drive fair GMing decisions. But yes, it is a different activity. And even between sports, what constitutes fair is going to vary depending on the specifics of the rules. That doesn't mean we can't develop, or that we haven't developed, a sense of what makes a fair referee. A lot of the conversations on threads I have been in with Estar have been about what makes a gamemaster fair.
Oh I have no problem with the term as a reference to the role of the GM that involves interpreting the rules. I get its use, and I'd probably use it for ease of reference in conversation.
But I think the more important question here is "What does 'fair' mean for a RPG?" and "How is what's fair different for a RPG when compared to sports or other activities?"
So to kind of put that in context.....yes, an umpire in baseball calls balls and strikes for batters on the same team, and we'd hope that his judgment is applied consistently from batter to batter. But more importantly, more crucially, he's also calling balls and strikes for the opposing team's batters. This is where being fair truly matters.
Removing the opposition from the situation, and that really shifts the idea of "fair", doesn't it?
What does it mean to be fair to participants in an activity who are all on the same team? Does being fair stop meaning the same thing as being consistent, and instead mean offering each participant the means to succeed? Does it become "unfair" to lean toward an individual player's strengths to give them a chance to succeed? If so, unfair to whom?