Hussar
Legend
Then I am simply jumping off your point. This whole notion of "quantum" encounter is just more smoke and mirrors trying to pretend that a particular methodology is somehow distinct from others when it isn't. As shown by:You are arguing against a position I do not hold.
True.
Sorry, but, in what way is improv =/= to quantum? After all, in improv, nothing exists until after a fact is established. That cook will absolutely not be anywhere in the notes or whatnot of the DM until after the failed lock pick roll. The second the DM adds anything to the setting in response to a failed (or successful for that matter) roll is always quantum. Random encounters are the clearest example of quantum. Those trolls on the road didn't exist until the PC's spent X amount of time traveling on that road. And I know they didn't exist, because it was a purely random die roll that brought them into play. A different die roll would result in a completely different encounter or even no encounter at all.If the cook is only there because of the lockpick roll, yes.
Improv =/= quantum. Existing and not existing until after a die is rolled = quantum.
Again, fail forward isn't relevant. I'm talking about those of us who avoid fail forward, either the correct or incorrect versions. I haven't seen anyone on my side of the issue who used fail forward of any interpretation, so I'm talking about all of them. We don't connect whether the cook is there or not to the lockpick roll.
There is zero difference between "Random encounter 3/day, 1 in 6" and "a cook appears after you unlock the lock">