I mean, you and
@pemerton have done that to me several times each in this thread. It seems a bit hypocritical to object to someone doing it to you.
I don’t think I’ve taken one instance of play you’ve described and then assumed that is the entirety of what you do as a GM.
Of where it doesn't cause an issue. At least not as a general thing. I suppose individuals here and there might be unable to understand what "hard to hit" means, but most of us understand that the creature is.......................hard to hit. Not having the exact numbers isn't a problem.
It’s not about not understanding. It’s that natural language is imprecise. So anytime precision might be needed, natural language would be an issue.
It’s really not complicated.
No. I'm saying jargon should be restricted to conversations where only those who know and use it are present. A forum where anyone is free to join the conversation isn't the place for it.
That’s nonsense. It’s an RPG forum.
That isn't telling you that you are doing it wrong. Telling you how I'd do it is far from telling you that you are wrong for doing it in your game. Thanks for finally admitting that I didn't do that to you.
If you don’t think you criticized the way I’d do it… with all the talk of people in the midwest and whatever else you were saying to explain how my reasoning wasn’t sound, then fine. As I said, I expect my opinions or ideas to be criticized when I post here.
Why make people ask when you know those people are present in these threads? That and lot of people won't ask. They'll just fail to understand what is being said and move on to something else. It's basically gating the conversation behind jargon.
So let me get this straight… you expect me to be aware of what everyone else in a thread may or may not know, and then limit what I say accordingly?
That’s ridiculous.
On a forum like this, it doesn't.
I think it absolutely does. People should be responsible for themselves.
I’ll happily explain anything I post that anyone may ask about. I try to explain details from games that may not be known by others.
To expect what you seem to expect of each participant in a discussion and then throw out a word like “gating”… that’s pretty remarkable. Only one of us is telling others how they can engage.
After the fact. You will just hand out the information and justify it later, which is the opposite of what was said above. Deciding what the character would know has to be done before the fact. If you simply let them know things and justify it later, you've given no thought to what the character would know before you let them know it.
No, it’s justified based on the situation.
That's not to say you didn't have a reason to give the information out. In this case not liking to keep situations like that mysterious. It's just that the reason wasn't about what the character would or wouldn't know. After the fact justification doesn't change that.
It’s both. I don’t want to keep situations like that mysterious, so I tailor my descriptions accordingly. I’d make it clear what was going on.