Jon Peterson discusses the origins of Rule Zero on his blog. It featured as early as 1978 in Alarums & Excursions #38.
I think we can attribute Pathfinder's success to two things: They made great products starting with Rise of the Runelords and continued making quality game material. The new Pathfinder RPG was perfectly poised to take advantage of the lackluster reception of D&D 4E with fans who decided they'd rather stick with something that resembled D&D 3.5. But it's not like Pathfinder was a completely new product. It's basically just D&D with some tweaks.
I don’t disagree with a lot of this. That may be the case now, but it wasn’t 8 years ago. There is a reason D&D has risen to such prominence the brand isn’t it. Because the D&D brand has been around throughout.
Yes. This.
D&D got this brand loyalty by being First.
And by its rules being Good Enough.
Especially with the common B/X sets that made D&D early on they were easy to pick up and play for newbs because they hit certain RPG design points that worked really well together:
1: Easy PC creation.
2: Graspable Rules complexity.
3: Easily grasped Default play mode.
4: Easily understood setting.
5: Straight-forward reward mechanism.
But being First and Good Enough are very big trumps. Once you have established market dominance it can be very hard for any competitors to mount a real challenge without "help" from the market leader in the form of mistakes.
As we can see in places Like Japan with Sword World, and Germany with The Dark Eye...
If someone hit all/most of those design points in their respective native languages First; they were able to shut D&D out of the top spot of fantasy RPG's in their respective countries.
Where 4e failed against Pathfinder 1e was that a lot of D&D players felt that the 4e rulesets was no longer Good Enough for the way that they wanted to play and experience D&D.
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Thing is, how is "a way that makes sense" codified or sorted out in play such that everyone - both at the table and in the fiction - is operating on the same footing? (see answer below)Maybe I didn't make myself clear.
Rule 0 is only needed in rules-first games, because only in rules-first games there may be a situation where the results of rules at work don't make sense -- because rules exist separately from the fiction.
In rules-first, rules represent fictional concepts and events. Examples:
- Lance theoretically can be used when unmounted, but it's supposed to be used by mounted warriors, who wield it in one hand. So, we come up with a rule: "a lance requires two hands to wield when you aren't mounted."
- Using two weapons should allow making more attacks than you can do with one weapon. So, we come up with a rule: "When you take the Attack action and Attack with a light melee weapon that you’re holding in one hand, you can use a Bonus Action to Attack with a different light melee weapon that you’re holding in the other hand".
In a fiction-first game, a lance is just a lance, a heavy weapon, used by mounted knights and holding two weapons means just holding two weapons -- the character "on screen" is using a lance (or two daggers) in a way that makes sense within the fictional context.
Again, how is that spectacular failure codified? (see answer below)So a situation like "ok, so there's nothing in the rules that forbids me from dual-wielding lances if I take a Dual Wielder feat and ride a horse" just can't happen -- because riding a horse with two lances doesn't get translated into "I'm using Mounted combat rules and dual-wielding two D12 Piercing weapons with Reach" -- the character on-screen is wielding two lances, which on-screen would lead to a spectacular failure, unless the character in question is an enhanced super-soldier or something.
How? (see answer below)In a rules-first game you need to invoke rule 0 in order to forbid ridiculous knight with two lances who can fight even more effective than a reasonable knight with one lance. In a fiction-first game you don't need to invoke rule 0, because dual-lanced knight is gonna get reasonably screwed already.
I agree about the framework.Nope, that's just an easy way for designers to say "ok, do whatever you want, I'm done here". What actually makes game flexible is a solid, understandable framework and loose tolerances.
5e isn't as flexible as it could be. Oddly enough, a nice side effect of 1e's different-system-for-different things approach is that it becomes more flexible: you can change things to suit a different style of play without doing too much damage to other parts of the system.Dungeon World that doesn't have rule 0, but has comprehensive GM Agenda and GM Principles is more flexible than, say, D&D 5E.
That all sounds rather GURPS-like, as that was the vibe they were going for.You want to play a high-magic fantasy with floating ships and enormous cities, lit up by arcane lamps and with glorious Academy of Natural Philosophy, where illusionists give mind-blowing shows every now and then? It works. You want to play a low-magic game, where magic is a power beyond mere human comprehension and each wizard risks tearing the Veil between the world of the living and the world of the dead with each cast spell? It works too. You make the same Moves with accordance to the same Principles, but within different fictional contexts -- in a world of ubiquouts and well-understood magic, consequence for failing to cast a spell properly probably would be something along the lines of "While you were citing magical formulas, an ork archer shot his bow at you. What ya gonna do?", but not "You feel air around you go cold, the arcane vibrations of your spell attracted something that doesn't belong to this world. In a split-second, a horrendous canine creature, dreaded Hound of Tindalos, forms from the nearest corner and latches on your leg. What ya gonna do?".
Or, maybe you want to play a superhero game, where people are thrown through brick walls, get smacked by sledgehammers and then get up and fight, maybe bruised slightly? It works -- you just don't use long-term injuries as consequences. But in a gritty game, where ribs break, lungs get punctured, internal bleedings makes people pass out -- you do, and the system works too.
You don't make any alterations to the rules, but you make alterations to the fiction.
"Just figure it out" is the most flexible structure you can possibly have.In a more rigidly-structured game, like, again D&D 5E (or 3.5, or AD&D 2E, or even White Box), you'd either need to brew some new rules at home, or to apply ad-hoc patches with rule zero, because there's no flexibility and no framework that goes beyond "just figure it out".
Well, at the very start of D&D, at least the "fill in the blanks" really was expected to be used willy-nilly because OD&D as a rule set was downright skeletal. Any mechanics being combat a couple other limited areas beyond the completely ad-hoc were going to have to be made up as you go along, or pre-constructed houserules, because there just wasn't much to work with.
To be honest, on any real engagement with the rules, OD&D proper was kind of a crap game. What it was, was dirt simple for the most part, and it was first out the door. It expanded wildly early on for the other reasons you say, and by the time anyone else was even in motion, they were working against a serious uphill fight, both in expectation and network externalities.
A crap game compared to what? Was there anything like it in 1974? I tend to put more stock in opinions from the same era of the work that was produced. If OD&D was a terrible system, or thought of as a terrible system, it wouldn't have spread like wildfire.To be honest, on any real engagement with the rules, OD&D proper was kind of a crap game. What it was, was dirt simple for the most part, and it was first out the door. It expanded wildly early on for the other reasons you say, and by the time anyone else was even in motion, they were working against a serious uphill fight, both in expectation and network externalities.
The original game did everything we (see below for who "we" were) needed it to do in 1974. That's not "a crap game". We had all been playing Chainmail (and other miniature rules) for years. We were familiar with the fact that each group modified / added to the rules as they saw fit. A framework was all that we needed. I played a dozen plus different miniature rule sets with as many groups over the years and they all had their own house rules. No two groups were identical in what they played. Some were closer than others of course.I tend to agree with most of this.
To be honest, on any real engagement with the rules, OD&D proper was kind of a crap game. What it was, was dirt simple for the most part, and it was first out the door. It expanded wildly early on for the other reasons you say, and by the time anyone else was even in motion, they were working against a serious uphill fight, both in expectation and network externalities.
But they aren't supposed to be on the same footing in the fiction -- someone wielding a lance properly is going to have an edge over a dude struggling to operate two lances.Thing is, how is "a way that makes sense" codified or sorted out in play such that everyone - both at the table and in the fiction - is operating on the same footing? (see answer below)
Again, how is that spectacular failure codified? (see answer below)
There are rules and guidelines, and that's precisely why rule 0 is not necessary.How? (see answer below)
Answer: if there's no rules or guidelines to sort out these questions, the default becomes either a) GM fiat or b) consensus agreement around the table; which in either case is a straight-up application of Rule 0.
Well, no rule can enforce itself, obviously.The idea of GM Principles (and perhaps, Player Principles) seems as worded to want to shift rules codification away from the rulebooks and into the social realm; it assumes by default a GM and a group of players willing and ready to adhere to such principles. Well, in real life that just doesn't work that well that often.![]()
They deal the same damage, yes, but weapon doesn't boil down to damage. What the character needs to do in order to deal said damage? How the damage actually manifests within fiction?In dungeon world a Battleaxe and a Longsword do damage according to your classes base damage. There are no meaningful mechanical differences. (If you are a fighter you can select enhancements to your signature weapon, but another fighter can easily choose the same enhancements for his as well. My "Axe", my "Sword" - It's all just flavor.
Good framework and guidelines is... exactly what I'm talking about.AW games are all about the GM making constant rulings /judgement calls because of their relatively rules light structure. They just provide good framework and guidelines for GM's to use when making those rulings.