Corinnguard
Hero
Being creative and seeing some potential possibilities on how you wanted your character to progress at every level?What was it?

Being creative and seeing some potential possibilities on how you wanted your character to progress at every level?What was it?
Believe me, anyone who's played with me knows my powergaming tendencies aren't cloaked in anything.When a player claims that it's not about power and chooses to cloak their power gaming under the guise of roleplay story and so forth it becomes impossible to work with them because their opening stance is a misleading distraction covering for their real desires.
And those would be?their real desires.
It seems like your question was answered in the very post you selectively quoted. This is where extreme selective partial quotes lead to problems. I didn't think there was any subtlety in the bolded bit you omitted.And those would be?
I even included a link to a video talking about power gaming I'm a way I explicitly stated to be a take I agree with, that should clear up "power gaming" if there was a stumbling point there.Lots of words could be used. Given your support for it, do you have none of your own? Here are a few of many.
Unreasonable
Excessive
Too extreme
Little more than an excuse for dressing up a spreadsheet
Broken
Etc.
Cody from taking20 has a great bit about power gamers in this video and I agree with what he says about them. When a player claims that it's not about power and chooses to cloak their power gaming under the guise of roleplay story and so forth it becomes impossible to work with them because their opening stance is a misleading distraction covering for their real desires.
See, I started in the 3.5 era and teens then felt 3E stuff was still fair game. Heck, I think a lot of my friends were importing 2E stuff and campaign material...The 3e game I was in did a mid-campaign hard-switch to 3.5, and our 3e players' books pretty much became redundant on the spot.
Just old people. And we're not the market they particularly care about. Most 5e players don't care (or even know) about editions because they started with 5e, which they just call "D&D", and WotC understandably wants to keep it that way. That's the whole point, and what what most grognards can't seem to wrap our heads around: it's not about us. We'll probably go to our graves railing about editions. Fine.Even if WoTC didn't, people within the D&D community are still going to see it as a new edition anyways.
True. There is going to be a generation of D&D players whose first D&D session is going to be using material from D&D2024 over previous editions. This generation is more likely going to be their target audience than those who had played in previous editions of D&D. It happens every time a new edition comes out.Just old people. And we're not the market they particularly care about. Most 5e players don't care (or even know) about editions because they started with 5e, which they just call "D&D", and WotC understandably wants to keep it that way. That's the whole point, and what what most grognards can't seem to wrap our heads around: it's not about us. We'll probably go to our graves railing about editions. Fine.
Indeed, but in the interests of both fairness (in the meta) and consistency (in the fiction( those exceptions have to be the same for everyone.The idea that a named player-facing rules element needs to be identical for everyone playing is a pernicious myth that needs to die. 5e is about exception-based design.
OK, Player A is using a bespoke DM-approved rules element. One of three things then happens if Player B wants to use the rule in the manner in which she's familiar with it:Every character can be its own exception. If player A uses a bespoke rules element that's been approved by the DM, then player B's familiarity with the rule is immaterial. You don't need to police other people's characters. You do your thing, the other player does their thing, and as long as the DM is good, it doesn't matter.
If I have to smell your broccoli then you probably are hurting my meal.I know food metaphors always work wonderfully and never blow up in my face, so here we go.
If I order the cheeseburger and fries, and you also order the cheeseburger and fries, but swap out the beef patty for chicken, hold the tomatoes, add horseradish aioli, and have broccoli instead of fries, you aren't hurting my meal in any way. The DM is paying and picked the restaurant, but as long as your order isn't too expensive, why would the DM care?
That's fair. I don't use it either.Yeah. I completely forgot about that since none of my 1e DMs used it.![]()
DM: Your Perception check beats his Deception check. You notice that he is using a sauce to hide the broccoli. Do you call him out on it?If I have to smell your broccoli then you probably are hurting my meal.![]()