EzekielRaiden
Follower of the Way
It was simply another example I've seen of someone who took the hardest hardline stance they could, and then contorted into a pretzel when they came to realize how flawed and harmful that stance was but couldn't actually accept giving up that hardline stance.Are you talking about stuff like dissociated mechanics (because I didn’t see the post you were responding to).
I don't accept grandfathered exceptions to hardline stances. I find that to be openly and blatantly hypocritical. I then find that double especially unacceptable when a new exception, which came along after, is not only treated as the most super amazingly awesome thing to ever happen, it is specifically defended as being a good instance of the thing that had, up to that point, been rejected as inherently and necessarily bad.What I am saying is just that in those kinds of conversations sometimes people find a root cause of a problem for them but over apply the explanation. For instance I think dissociated mechanics was one aspect of why some features of 4E didn’t feel right for some people. I think though they started going on a. Witch hunt and rejecting all dissociated mechanics where they found them. And the issue is dissociate mechanics are just one piece of the explanation and dissociated mechanics are only an issue when you really notice them. You can point back to earlier editions but they were in places of the game where they were do grandfsthered in no one noticed or in that particular context they just didn’t pop out. Also where I agree with you is fundamentally the root cause is just a possible explanation (call it dissociate theory). The real issue is they didn’t like the mechanics in question as they appeared in 4E (and it may have also been heightened by other things the game was doing).
I don't really feel like discussing 4e any further. I simply brought it up as an example of the same kind of argument as what I was responding to.