Neither does fudging, as I proved. If I roll a 20 and your AC is 16, by RAW I can announce a miss and it is in fact a miss. No lie or deception there. The monster objectively missed and that miss was reported to you.
Whether you define it as a deception or lie is not particularly relevant. Even if they are wrong, if players define it as a deception or lie, or simple negative, then that is what matters. That is what will erode the health of the game.
Juuuuuuuast a bit of a False Equivalence there.
It's more like when my wife takes a candy bar from my son's Halloween bag and doesn't tell him. He's not going to know. It's nothing like a significant other cheating on you.
Some folks are pretty serious about there role playing, maybe more so than their relationships. Who am I to judge?
Two things, does it really matter if the person being deceived knows? Is it still wrong to deceive? Second, how do you not know they know? I now kids who count their Halloween candy and know exactly how many pieces of each they have
It's been nice rolling in the open online recently (just the rolls not the bonuses showing on rolldicewithfriends) because one player has made some (I think mostly in jest) snide remarks when I've managed to have a lucky string of rolls against their high ac.
"I can send you the link if you want to see all the rolls, they're sitting there for the whole night."
I haven't gotten any comments on how I tracked hit point totals or brought in reinforcements or not.
This goes to a point, even if a DM does not admit to fudging, players might think the DM is fudging. That thought goes to eroding the health of the game. Then doing things like Colville suggesting and compounding the lie is... well, since we are humans and not perfect, players are not always going to believe the evidence. And now the group has a bigger issue that is going to be harder to resolve. Trust.
Thanks for giving me a lot to think about for my next session 0!
Me too. I've been considering writing up this topic for presentation at my next session 0. Would be interesting to see what others come up with. A new thread perhaps?
After all, pro wresting is one of the most popular sports on TV and has been so for my entire lifetime
But is that saying much? A quick Google tells me the weekly viewership is single digit millions in the US. Compared to the 300 billion US population, that's less than 1%.
I mean, of all the things I've heard players complain about, fudging doesn't even crack the top 10. IME, no one really cares. We all know that the DM has his or her thumb on the scales from time to time. That's just part of DMing.
You're hearing about it in this thread. And as I've stated before, its the cause that has killed two campaigns I've played in. Just because you haven't knowingly experienced it, does not mean that it is not a problem at the community level.
So, yes, it is, as far as I know, an unheard of thing. The idea that the player would hold the game hostage because the DM put his thumb on the scales of a single die roll, when the DMG gives advice that tells the DM to DO EXACTLY THIS, isn't something I've ever seen before.
Lucky you. It's not unheard of to myself and others.
Because fudging by definition requires discretion to be effective.
Yes, but since humans are not perfect, discretion will not always be effective and therefore fudging will be detected, and by this definition, will fail.
I'm aware some people take issue with the very concept of fudging but others i wonder if it's just a matter of it being a thing that a DM could theoretically be doing at any and every opportunity behind the screen, if it was more structuctured about when and where, how many times it could happen a game/session/against each player, would players be more comfortable knowing yes it happens, but it only happens to an established limited degree.
As said, other rule systems ave mechanics for similar things. A table playing 5E could just give the DM inspiration to use as desired. But, for trust to not be questioned, rolls need to be in the open so the use of the mechanic can be validated by everyone.
I've absolutely seen dice fudging, and it absolutely tanked the game. Not in that very moment, but later on us players talked about it, it was clear, it weirded us all out, and we steered away from playing that GM's game again, or, honestly, anything else he wanted to run. It was a real thing that essentially booted him out of the GM chair for good.
See, I'm not the only one who has had this experience. For me, fudging is the second most common reason campaigns ave ended prematurely. First being people moving away (before VTTs) and second being fudging die rolls.
Regardless of your position on fudging, there's nothing dishonest about it.
Regardless of your definition of dishonesty, my morals and ethics indicate that changing the die roll is dishonest. I'm not lone in this. You should accept that others, including potentially one or more of your players, feel the same way.
Right. It's warning that the players might overreact and not understand what the fudging is for and react poorly to their misperception.
Or they might not agree with your justification for it and believe it is wrong bad and not fun. They are entitled to that view,just like you are to yours.
They have no way of knowing that you're fudging from time to time.
Yes, players do. You, just like the rest of us, are not perfect. Therefore fudging will be detected at some tables in some instances.
I didn't say that. I answered your question on how it wouldn't erode trust.
But it does! I've seen it happen twice. Two campaigns I've played in (as an adult) have died because of this very reason
It was an answer to your question. It's not my fault if people misperceive what fudging is. Trust eroded over a misperception isn't my doing.
Trust eroded at your table is your problem. Do you want your campaign to end because of a misperception that can be avoided by being honest in Session 0?
This is false. If you trust the DM, you can trust him to be impartial, fudging or no.
DMs are human, therefore they are fallible, therefore they will make mistakes and not all fudging will be impartial.
Not if done fairly and impartially. I never fudge partially. It's done neutrally in all cases.
Well then you are not human
Or perhaps I am confusing definitions again :O