I tend to be hyper-critical of published adventures. I’m even more critical of my own work, so I’m stuck.It's always nice to find a thread that reminds me of why I hate modules so much.![]()
I tend to be hyper-critical of published adventures. I’m even more critical of my own work, so I’m stuck.It's always nice to find a thread that reminds me of why I hate modules so much.![]()
By ‘the point’ I mean the point of a module, the purpose, the benefit.What is "the point"? Maybe I missed your point, but you missed my point? Who gets to own or define "the point"? What if your "the point" is different than my "the point"?
This is a valid opinion. I am just not sure what are your intentions or conclusions here. Also who are you referring to when you wrote "not say ‘so it is written’ I will not budge" and what does that mean specifically?
Unlike those who simply advocate for their personal opinion, I started this poll because I was curious what people preferred from a 5E published adventure as written. I think there is a lot of value in diagnosing a problem and seeking the opinion of the wider community. Assuming I am not missing "the point"?
What have I omitted? You’re being very ambiguous.@TheSword I don't have an issue per se with what you stated above. Those are valid opinions for you to hold. I have an issue with what you omitted from this.
If your goal is to advocate for your approach, that's fine. You've done so. If your goal is reconcile your approach with my POV or the POVs of others who hoped for or expected a little or a lot more out of any published module, then I'm going to have to ask you to integrate into your argument what you omitted.
Yes that is the way of the world. Change is ineiveitable nobody really likes it unless they personally benefit from it and even if they do they often don’t see it that way. That’s human nature.Just for example, in the edition wars, there have been people who complained and wanted to change something, and others who have retorted with just homebrew it. Ironically, after the next edition, one person in one camp may find themselves in the camp they had previously been criticizing. In any case, those arguments never went anywhere. If I had a similar debate with you about "You can change it!" it means I have learned absolutely nothing from endless arguments that are proven to fail and fail over and over again.
For one thing, I don't have enough time in my day to prioritize to rewriting published adventures to my satisfaction. Similarly, I also don't want to make precious time to rewrite my thoughts just for you specifically, no offense!What have I omitted? You’re being very ambiguous.
The way of the world is also that online debates would be productive if more people were mindful of what is actually a productive conversation, and what is just an argument. If your next response seems non-productive to me, I willYes that is the way of the world. Change is ineiveitable nobody really likes it unless they personally benefit from it and even if they do they often don’t see it that way. That’s human nature.
Judging by the conversation, it seems to. In another thread, @pemerton discusses the difference between design that makes you lean into the fiction versus design that makes you lean into the rules. For me, alignment is the epitome of the latter. Instead of focusing on what makes for a good story and believable character motivations, much of this conversation instead focuses on what counts as "good" or "lawful" or whether gold dragons have to be lawful good, etc.
I agree with this. Dragons, like beholders, mind flayers, etc, I think SHOULD be alien intelligences who do not conform to normal good-humanoid thinking. They live for centuries and have the benefit of seeing that in the long term, not all questionable actions lead to bad resultsBecause the organization is run by metallic dragons. They undoubtedly consider themselves above petty humanoid laws, and they're all about the hoarding of wealth, even the "good" ones.
Mod Note:If your next response seems non-productive to me, I will add a sad face emoji instead of blocking you.
Gary Gygax argued that genocide was perfectly acceptable behaviour for a lawful good character, if it was genocide against an evil race. So are you being unfaithful to your alignment?Why?
Im playing a LG PC. I engage in genocide.
How does that change the fiction in any way, other than I'm being unfaithful to my alignment?