deleuzian_kernel
Adventurer
Dude, I love this. It pains me to see how we disagree so much on technique if this is indeed your play priority, because this is my play priority.Furthermore, real discussions are about more than winning and losing. Perhaps indeed neither man will stop pursuing Lady Violette, but they will agree that this nevertheless will not break their friendship. Or perhaps the discussion is goes into a less amicable direction and they become enemies. Or perhaps they just gain better understanding where the other is coming from. Or perhaps they realise the obvious, that they're haggling about a woman like she was a piece of merchandise, and it is ultimately up to her to decide who she wants. (Hopefully neither of these idiots.)
I think you don't think that what we do with technique gets us the above. Reliably. Your response to my posts makes me think that you really don't.
The question that me and other posters have about your techniques is....who is rendering these moral and ethical judgements. Are we doing it together? Or is it really just the GM who pronounces moral judgement through overt declaration or illusionism?
I really don't see things that way. This might sound pretentious but earlier in the thread I was saying that what Maxperson is doing is a form of expression about the human condition. Making a statement. Basically mutually creating art. It's just from the first person perspective it's often framed and feels like, this is what my character would do. This has a lot of unconscious influence.
So the conflict is between the characters, not the participants. The resolution is basically making a statement about the human condition.
Let's say I have the squire cede because he's scared of going against Sir James authority. How does that work out for him? How does throwing around his authority work out for Sir james?
Anyway the other part of this is the idea of moral/thematic escalation. (and crimsons recent post was a good example of that)
A character might not get their way but what then?
Let's say that Sir James started the conversation more amicably and was like, you're young and inexperienced this is puppy love. The squire doesn't cede. What does Sir James do? maybe he escalated across a moral line and 'that's' when he starts throwing around his authority. What does that say about him as a person? How does it work out for him?
So to get back to your point. Audience consensus or who is better at social manoeuvring is still missing the point. That framing still conceives of things as control over the story. Does that make sense?
This goes for you too! Like, it seems like we totally agree on play priority. All those up and downs and complexities you are describing, I want and get them too. The problem I have with the above is that you say that the conflict is between the characters, not the participants. The conflict does exist in some level at the participant level because we are advocating for their in-fiction conflicts of interest. If you don't advocate for what the squire wants, who will? Certainly not me, I want the opposite.
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