Because they care about the integrity of the fiction.Why wouldn't they invoke it if it benefits them to do so?
Because they care about the integrity of the fiction.Why wouldn't they invoke it if it benefits them to do so?
Huh? "I hook up with my contact!" is an action declaration too.Everything in combat, just like the rest of the game, starts with action declaration: ie, the fiction. We then use the mechanics to adjudicate it.
I assume you're intending that remark in some non-dismissive, non-pejorative sense?Sure. I can do so without a background feature prompting me to, but I understand if some people need training wheels.
Just as much as the comment I was responding to.I assume you're intending that remark in some non-dismissive, non-pejorative sense?
I wish people would stop using words that denigrate my playstyle.I assume you're intending that remark in some non-dismissive, non-pejorative sense?
Like, they're training wheels for you, but not for those who like and use the features?
By "the fiction" in that last clause, I take it that you mean what the GM is imagining?When people here talk about the mechanic being subservient to the fiction, they are talking about a mechanic that always works, even when the fiction says it shouldn't.
I don't think a character who is asleep or unconscious can reach out to their networks and contacts either, unless they have some ability to do so via dreams.You can draw your sword automatically or use action surge automatically. Oh, wait. No you can't. You can't do those things when you are asleep or unconscious in the fiction.
It's very easy to get angry when this happens (I empathize fully) but in the end, we're all strangers here, not personal friends or colleagues and so who the hell cares what some random jabronies think about the way I play my elf games?I wish people would stop using words that denigrate my playstyle.
Except there are combat rules in virtually every traditional RPG (and many others), and ignoring them seems a little silly to me (especially since they represent the bulk of many rulesets).There's actually no reason combat can't be free-formed too. (As I think someone already said upthread - maybe @soviet?)
Not a priority for some players IME, and assuming that it is in a rulebook would be, in my opinion, a mistake.Because they care about the integrity of the fiction.
Except the mechanics for those things are not within the grasp of the PC, and in the fiction would not be guarenteed, so IMO the mechanic shouldn't be guaranteed either.