hawkeyefan
Legend
Here is a section from the GM Best Practices chapter of Blades in the Dark.
@Crimson Longinus I think you may find this section particularly relevant to the ongoing Blades in the Dark discussions.
I posted about that section in response to you, much earlier in the thread.
Here, post 2272
Yes, I ma quite familiar with that paragraph. It quite clearly illustrates the vagueness of myth in Blades compared to more trad approach. But like the prep in trad game this "cloud of potential" is also mainly created by the GM, and it is the GM who chooses what about it to actualise. But they really are doing this on their own whim. Are there guards dogs to be avoided? GM decides. Are there statues that help you sneak through the yard? The GM decides. Are there fancy locks that need to be picked? The GM decides. Etc. etc. And as this all is decided on the fly, instead of being predetermined, there really is no objective measure of when the score is "finished."
And I am absolutely sure, that to most GMs how well the party is doing overall, will impact what the GM will frame next. Like if they do super well early on, the GM will be more willing to frame more obstacles than if they did terribly early on. Because there is not any objective benchmark for how much there should be, not even a self imposed one in form of binding prep.
This is poppycock.
It requires a willful ignorance of things which have repeatedly been sited to you.
But let’s just set aside the arguing for a moment. What is your point?
Is it that Blades is more railroady than trad play? Or something else?