I just care differently. I'm not sure of what things could just make a person sink from entering my house. I take it you have, could you give some examples of things you and others have done in such a case? Or maybe if anyone else has an example?
There are lots of allergies that are quite dangerous. There are other allergies that cause very unpleasant reactions, even if they're not fatal. Some allergies can even cause anaphylaxis if you touch a surface on which the food was prepared. I've heard of cases of people with peanut allergies getting horribly sick by kissing or being breathed on by people who had eaten a peanut butter sandwich hours before.
In the Before Times, we would game at a friend's parents' house--he used to live there, eventually moved out, his parents still didn't mind us coming over using their enormous table, and his mother apparently loves cooking for us. Then we got a new player who was allergic to
lots of things, although fortunately none of their allergies cause, fortunately. They tried to bring their own food and she responded by cooking food for them separately and keeping the kitchen door closed when she was cooking with any capsaicin or nightshades, so the smell wouldn't make them sick. And by sick, I mean seriously swollen up and in pain for days. When she didn't cook, we would order out, and we would avoid getting spicy food because we knew the smell would sicken him.
A bit of decency keeps my friend from being sick.
Likewise, the friend whose house we gamed at keeps kosher to some degree, so we make sure to avoid getting food that he can't eat because of that. We've done the same for vegetarian and vegan friends.
Movies have warnings on them, right at the start. So if someone reads and listens to the warnings, then sits there to watch the movie, and "suddenly" a couple minutes later they have a "problem", I put that all on them.
How about no scare quotes around the word problem? The problems are real, even if you don't care about them.
Also, movies tend to just having warnings like "gore" or "nudity." They don't usually say things like "baby murder" or "torture."
And no, that's not just "on them." If you want to be a good host, it's up to you to make sure your guests are comfortable.
You kind of prove my point here.
Was your point that you didn't bother to think about a very common trigger and sprung it on people without warning or asking? If that's the case, I agree.
One of the people at my table will say things like "hey, you guys OK with killing slavers" before an adventure arc starts. They're also a very good DM. While I don't go
that far, I
do pay attention to what people don't want to see and work around it, which is why I don't use certain topics in my games, even though they're actually perfect for the genre I run (horror). Because being able to use that topic is less important than everyone at the table is having fun.
Well, I don't agree with this action at all. I came to play an RPG for a couple hours: as soon as someone says "I want to stop playing the game and talk " I'm out. It's not why I am there. And I sure would not do it if I was host or in charge.
Have you considered working on your interpersonal skills?
I don't know about you, but
I wouldn't be able to have fun playing a game that was upsetting someone else--it would knock me right out of immersion and make me want to help that person who was upset.
I do use details in my game.
So it wasn't that they got upset that you included slavers; they got upset because you included gory details.