A book which only one person reads can't establish a shared fiction. Some member of the group of people (or maybe more than one) has to perform that task.Isn't the content established by the module?
A book which only one person reads can't establish a shared fiction. Some member of the group of people (or maybe more than one) has to perform that task.Isn't the content established by the module?
I don’t agree. If a Group agrees to play a module then the module establishes the fiction (at least the modules part). The DM in that case just relays what is established.A book which only one person reads can't establish a shared fiction. Some member of the group of people (or maybe more than one) has to perform that task.
Are members of the group policing the GM's running of the module? Do they veto any additions, changes or omissions the GM incorporates?I don’t agree. If a Group agrees to play a module then the module establishes the fiction (at least the modules part). The DM in that case just relays what is established.
Yes via social contract.Are members of the group policing the GM's running of the module?
Yes via social contract.Do they veto any additions, changes or omissions the GM incorporates?
I have never seem that happen. Moreover, I have never seen it happen where a group demanded a module be run precisely by the book with no modifications. And players who acted that entitled would certainly be looking for a different GM and I would hope they never found one. The GM isn't your servant.Yes via social contract.
Yes via social contract.
I see a general correlation between the use of the phrase “mother may I?” and attempts to limit GM agency. Some people don’t seem to want GMs to use their own judgment to adjudicate, and would rather have clearly defined rules and dice rolls.
A shared fiction has to be shared. It's there on the tin! If the players haven't read the book, and don't know what it says, the book isn't a shared fiction.I don’t agree. If a Group agrees to play a module then the module establishes the fiction (at least the modules part). The DM in that case just relays what is established.
I mean, prioritizing rules over rulings does kind of imply limiting "GM agency" doesn't it? I'd say it is right on topic.I'm never at all shy about saying that maximizing the amount of time a GM has to apply judgment calls is not a virtue; I've probably felt that way for 40 years now. But that's a discussion for wars about "Rulings not Rules" more than this particular topic.
I have never seem that happen. Moreover, I have never seen it happen where a group demanded a module be run precisely by the book with no modifications. And players who acted that entitled would certainly be looking for a different GM and I would hope they never found one. The GM isn't your servant.
I mean, prioritizing rules over rulings does kind of imply limiting "GM agency" doesn't it? I'd say it is right on topic.