clearstream
(He, Him)
Can you expand on that a bit please? Is the goal substituted in before resolution, or after? And do players adopt it (choose to pursue it)?Just a note here - it seems there’s a feeling from at least 1 poster that in conflict resolution a players stated goal can be substituted for a related but unstated player goal. Maybe that’s technically included in the middle ground you are talking about, but that’s not clear to me.
Also, there is the case of the dm saying no to the players goal (possibly proposing a different one) and that doesn’t seem to be mapped on this. The DM obviously cares about player intent and not performance. This and my first paragraph my be explaining similar stances - but I’m not lumping them together in case there’s some nuance I’ve missed.
Are you referring to this
As GM, you get to help establish stakes. If your player says “what’s at stake is this” you can say “no, I don’t dig that, how about what’s at stake is this instead?” Not only can you, you should. This is an important duty you have as GM and you shouldn’t abdicate it.As GM, you should push for small stakes. It’s natural for the players to set stakes big. “Do we get the whole truth from her about everything that’s going on? Do we convince him to give up his sinnin’ ways and do right forever after? Do we undo all the harm the cult has done?” You as GM have to engage with them and wrestle them down. You should be saying, “no, how about do you win her trust about some small matter? Do you give him a moment’s pause? Do you make this one person breathe easier, right now?” It’s out of creative tension between their big stakes and your small stakes that the right stakes are born.
Is it right that what you are getting at is - what happens if DM vetos the player goal? Can you give an example? Are they doing that because of a miss output from the resolution method? Is it because they are legitimating against drama?(Unless performance includes the player stating an intent the dm won’t ‘veto’ or agreeing with the DMs proposal of a different intent.)
Anyways I’m probably digging to deep - you did say it was a simple diagram.