Campbell
Relaxed Intensity
The stuff you mention can absolutely matter. And you still cannot escape subjective preference based calls. This is collaborative storytelling and people will bring their preferences in it and they will matter, no way around it. It feels to me that pikeople try to use technical jargon and buzzwords, to obfuscate what's actually happening at the table. Like when @Campbell says 'think what feels true' (none of it is true, you're still creating fiction) or 'advocate for the NPCs' or 'advocate for the world' these are still all just ways to describe creating a good story. Or when people say to take account what challenges the beliefs of the characters' or to come up with 'interesting thing,' these again are just aspects of creating a good story. The GM will make subjective calls, those calls will be influenced by their idea of a 'good story' (in a broad sensethere is no way around that, nor there need to be and it is silly to pretend otherwise.
Here's how I see it : Not all RPG play is collaborative storytelling. For instance when I play 5e the group I play with is absolutely engaging in collaborative storytelling. We're all mindful of the direction the story is going in, what each other's character concepts are, spotlight balancing, and the trajectory of their individual stories. We lean into plot hooks. The whole jazz. Critical Role style stuff.
The group I play Vampire and Infinity with is entirely different. There's none of that stuff going on. The players pretty much just play out the agendas of their individual characters. There's no concern for what the story is going to look like. The GM just provides honest antagonism. The focus is entirely on feeling what our characters feel and advocating for them. The entire focus is on the experience of being our characters in those tense moments. It's not collaborative storytelling even if I occasionally can sit back and enjoy the narrative.
It's actually not all that different from my experience with the gym. Right now I'm training for aesthetics. When I go to the gym I'm not concerned with expressing strength through lifting heavier weights in the same way a power lifter would. If strength was my concern I would have a training program focused on strength. Instead my focus is on building contractile tissue so my shoulders, chest, and upper back look bigger and my waist looks smaller. In order to do so I am concentrating on time under tension, mind muscle connection, and exhausting the muscle. If I approached my training with the same mindset I used to bring to power lifting it would be far less effective.
Still over the course of doing this body building program I'm still getting stronger and pushing heavier weights. I'm not concerned with getting stronger. It's just a side effect of putting on muscle. It's a fringe benefit rather than the point of the endeavor. In fact if I want to pursue my current goals optimally I have to exercise restraint and discipline when the urge to express my strength pops up.
The opposite is also true by the way. A peaking program would give minor hypertrophic benefits, but allow me to express strength much more easily. I would also have to be very disciplined about rest and volume. Making sure I was as fresh as possible for max effort work.
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