Cheating cheaters

I hope the 'cheering her on' thing works and keeps people's eyes on her dice but if it doesn't then you need to sit her down and tell her straight to her face that you've noticed a problem and not to be a filthy cheater. If that doesn't work, boot her. I don't see what more you can do.
Yeah, I hope so too. It's basically my last idea before direct confrontation. :)

-O
 

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Here's the playstyle issue right here. How random should it be? What if you think it should be less random than other people do? Why is there only one right amount of random?

There isn't just one right amount of random. That's why there are multiple systems. The amount of random is determined by the rules of the system you play. This woman has agreed to play in a game that has her roll a die and add a number. If she decides to cheat at this by lying about the number rolled on the die, this is cheating. If the woman has a fundemental disagreement about the idea of rolling a die and adding a number, she should probably play a different system. However, I doubt this is the case. More than likely, she hates rolling low, so she cheats and says she rolled higher than she did. While this may make the game more fun for her, it's pretty clear from Obryn's posts that it detracts from the enjoyment of the other players. If noone in the group cared, her behavior may be tolerable if not acceptable. However, her negative actions are detracting from the game, which is clearly unacceptable.


If the other players feel cheated in this situation, you need to find out why.

I would guess that they feel cheated because the other player is cheating...
 

Cheating has nothing to with playstyles or rules preferences but rather, a deliberate decision to engage in dishonesty. What I would recommend is that you talk to the problem player about her decision to be dishonest and tell her that it's causing issues with the other players who have chosen to not be dishonest. Explain that she basically has two option:

1. Start being honest.
2. Start playing in a different group.

That said, if the issue is only bothering you and none of the other players have specifically spoken to you about the dishonesty of this person, then you may be projecting your own feelings about the matter onto the other members of the group (i.e., assuming that the behavior in question is a big deal to everybody, when it isn't).

Ask your other players about it, specifically. If your other players are bothered by the situation, then confront the problem player. If it's now sweat off their backs, then you probably shouldn't sweat it, either, lest you come off looking like an obsessive control freak to the rest of the group ;)
 

Ask your other players about it, specifically. If your other players are bothered by the situation, then confront the problem player. If it's now sweat off their backs, then you probably shouldn't sweat it, either, lest you come off looking like an obsessive control freak to the rest of the group ;)
Oh, no - like I said, I already got their buy-in on the plan.

They were also the ones who alerted me to the issue, actually. I kinda figured something was up, since she was doing elementary cheater stuff - rerolls when I'm not looking, picking up her dice and staring at the number rather than leaving them on the table, hesitating before reading off numbers... They filled me in after the game one night.

It bothers them more than it does me.

-O
 

Well, that's a helpful comment. It certainly explains why players fudging their die rolls is inherently wrong.

I understood his intent and agree with Delta.

The 'why' isn't important. I don't care why people cheat at the table. It's not my job as DM or player to figure out why. Cheating doesn't fly in any of my games. When I DM, the cheater is booted if caught. As a player I will leave the game if the DM doesn't stop the cheating.

Thanks,
Rich
 
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While I may not be on-board with “valid playstyle” or the pysch angle, I do think they’re only damaging themself. They know what they’re doing and probably aren’t proud of it. They probably know the suspicion they’re engendering and aren’t proud of that either. Even if they don’t know, they are losing the respect of you and the others. And while it may bother the rest of you, this is a coöperative game (some would even say it doesn’t qualify as a “game”) so it’s not quite the same as cheating in a competitive game.

I think you have a simple choice:

1. Institute some of the suggestions for trying to minimize the cheating and you and the others try to remember that this person is hurting themself more than you.

2. Stop inviting them to the sessions.

Well, without any hard evidence to back me up, every approach I've made at it to date has ended with denial and a bit of defensiveness.

And here’s the real problem.

1. The lack of hard evidence means it is very unlikely they’ll own up to it and change.

2. If you have no hard evidence, you may be wrong.
 
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Interesting discussion. Cheating is an ethical issue. Cheating is lying. Lying is an ethical issue.

Anyhow, there are numerous ways to fix cheating players.

1) Stomp them harder, every time. DM's cheat. DM's therefore lie. Fortunately the rules say that we can... still, an ethical issue, one where the DM finds himself on the "dark" side of the line. Too bad cheating player. You cheat, I cheat worse. Childish, but mildly effective.

2) Curse them. Negatives on all rolls will do wonders for cheaters... first expect the backlash of even greater cheating, then as things escalate, cheating becomes unavoidable issue.

3) Send them an email daily with this thread.

OR, do what I did...

4) Make them use these...
http://www.gmdice.com/proddetail.php?prod=OD-16451
also comes in BLUE....

Really, #4. GIANT DICE! This sends a pretty clear message that the roller will pick up on.

Aluvial
 
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Well, without any hard evidence to back me up, every approach I've made at it to date has ended with denial and a bit of defensiveness. I mean, "That looked like a 7 to me," "No, my dice are funny," is about as far as that conversation can go without getting stupid.

...

Hence, my idea for somewhat subtle social correction. All I'm looking to do is solve the target behavior with a minimum of drama.

When you're calling her on it in front of the group it's not surprising she would be defensive, her only alternative may be to say "Yes, I'm cheating, it was a 7" (assuming she is cheating).

My prediction is that if people start to call her dice before she can fudge them she'll just retreat and roll her dice where nobody can see them. If you've established that it's a problem for your group, and I think the majority of groups would feel that way, I'd suggest talking to her about it in private with a good dose of tact as others have outlined already.
 

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