EzekielRaiden
Follower of the Way
Because it's being used as an explanation when it doesn't actually have any explanatory power.If it is so important in every style of play: why object to strenuously to it?
"Why did you buy Bellcamp's soup instead of Regresso's?"
"Because I was buying soup."
That doesn't answer the question, of course you were buying soup, that's already understood and doesn't actually say one damned thing about why you bought THAT soup and not THIS soup.
Alternatively: what if you aren't addressing it, and the reason you keep hearing the same argument is because the questions remain unanswered? It would be quite reasonable to keep asking a question if it hasn't actually gotten an answer yet.But people keep addressing this (including me in the last post I made). But you keep responding with the same arguments.
Of course they matter. But they aren't causing the decision. When BOTH yes AND no have realism, what makes you choose? When paths A-M are all realistic already, and you can make paths N-Z realistic with a little effort, what makes you choose?There is no point in beating this to death, but people are going to keep invoking things like plausibility, causality and realism because they matter (and no one is saying that means 100% real world simulation).
Answering "realism" to this question is straight up dodging. It's saying that realism is the deciding factor for something where that cannot possibly be the deciding factor because there is, or can quite easily be, realism in almost anything the DM might choose. And that's entirely before we get into the problems of DMs either being stubborn (which even a very good DM can stubbornly cling to something they initially thought was realistic) or grossly uninformed/mistaken about what actually is realistic.