Tovec
Explorer
That's a very curious statement. The implication is that owning and memorizing books translates to running good games? I don't buy it. I've had awesome games with completely inexperienced DMs.
No, it translates to understanding the rules of the game, aka, the issue you have been having NOT understand the rules of the game. In many cases (with us) if the person with the greatest imagination/intent on running a game isn't rules savvy they will have a PC be half-DM and help them when they need a ruling. When no one knows the rules EXCEPT one person and you want to use a certain rule-set, it helps if that person DMs to teach the others how it works.
I would take it so far to say that I've found a slight inverse correlation between a player's knowledge of the game and their ability to create memorable scenarios and characters. The players that read through the books and say "Dude, if I take this feat I can expand my crit range from 16-20" just seem incapable of making interesting/memorable characters or DMing. Just my experience.
I've found no correlation at all. As Mad Hamish said. Having a great imagination has little to do with understanding of rules. Having knowledge of rules doesn't push something else out. Having a good understanding of the rules and a good imagination only enhances the game for everyone. It allows you to quickly understand when something should or should not be allowed. It comes in handy when needing to make houserules to improve play. It makes it so everyone is on the same footing with their characters.
Why does everyone frown upon running a less rules-intensive game? No one else in the group owns a PF Core book, Sir Poofs-a-Lot can't run circles around me with rules, people in the group can't seem to remember what their feats do anyway, there's less potential for munchkining out and having huge power spreads between the gamers, and I know no one else will be reading the combat chapter of the base game anyway. I don't think any of my other players even know what a prestige class is anyway.
You aren't running a less rules-intensive game. You are running a regular game without knowledge of the rules. When one person abuses that lack of knowledge then an issue is created. If you want to play PF then the one person with the Core rulebook being the DM is a good idea. If they are unable to perform the task of DM then that's fine.
As for ''there's less potential for munchkining'' then I disagree as one of your players IS doing it. Without full knowledge for EVERYONE then I may agree but that would only be if they understand the rules enough to play and don't understand them enough to break it. Not understanding something and accidentally abusing it can be equally bad.
Not knowing what a prestige class is has very little to do with this issue or why I suggested the person with the Core run the game. If the guy with the Core would lend you the manual to read over and understand the rules that would be ideal in your case.