But if a player at the table thinks it's a bad call, and the players who think it's a fine call are all at other tables (eg posting in this forum), why do their views have any weight at all? And how are they supposed to be defences of 5e D&D - which is how they're being presented? The typical way you defend a game against someone's bad experience is by explaining how their bad experience was the result of a misapplication of the game rules and principles. Which I think is easy to do in this case!It appears to be the reason is probably because that’s still somewhat subjective. There are a lot of of qualifiers in rustic hospitality and the principles that depend somewhat on how different GMs (and players as well) are going to judge them. Disagreements do happen. GMs make judgments one player thinks conflict with rules of principles that another player think is in line with them