(and I passed my SAT with a perfect score and got Straight As in English in College, I'm not guessing here)

(and I passed my SAT with a perfect score and got Straight As in English in College, I'm not guessing here)
Not pemerton, but most of us are shackled and brain-boxed to doing tasks we don't want to do under penalty of death by exposure or starvation with little to no ability to escape let alone change our geographic location.@pemerton, do you consider our very real lives to be "low agency" vis a vis our ability to effect outcomes?
it matters in the sense that without one the DM is never actually bound, they just go along. Other than trusting the DM that they are not abusing their position you have nothing. Same as usIt doesn't seem profitable to delve deeply into the metaphysics of rule following. But in the context of a voluntary activity, rules bind by being taken up by the participants. A written text can make this easier, but isn't essential.
Ya, that, now just in a fantasy world. You attempt to affect change given your constraints and it may or may not work out.Not pemerton, but most of us are shackled and brain-boxed to doing tasks we don't want to do under penalty of death by exposure or starvation with little to no ability to escape let alone change our geographic location.
So the DM is the oppressive hand of the System and should be toppled?Ya, that, now just in a fantasy world. You attempt to affect change given your constraints and it may or may not work out.
No because that assumes some sort of intentionality. The DM is just reporting what happens.So the DM is the oppressive hand of the System?
I've read the passage in which Aragorn meets Eomer many times. Here is the core of it:Unlike with Aragorn there's nothing supernatural to that background.
The Dunedain has supernatural gifts, unlike those nobles.
The 5e feature is clear: it refers to high birth and contrasts that with common folk. It doesn't talk about audiences with oligarchs, or merchant guild leaders, or abbots, or the leaders of communes. It talks about nobility.Because the 5e feature has no inherent supernatural reason for nobility. It's just about power and position, and despite lack of "noble birth," higher offices in the U.S. are effectively nobility. Basically if it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, calling it elected isn't going to make it not a duck.
@pemerton, do you consider our very real lives to be "low agency" vis a vis our ability to effect outcomes?
...What happens in the world they run and make all the decisions for.No because that assumes some sort of intentionality. The DM is just reporting what happens.
I don't see what the second sentence has to do with anything. I contrasted a total railroad (let's say the module Dead Gods) with the RPG Burning Wheel run as Luke Crane sets out in his very clear rulebooks.There's a whole swath, an enormous swath, of people who play RPGs who want to say "Ok, you know how the real world works? That, but now fantasy".
And there are whole swaths of people who want to engage in, (what I do not consider to even be a game), collaborative fiction.