Lyxen
Great Old One
Well, yes. That's why I've been saying that this is all very circumstantial. In some circumstances it will be appropriate for me to invoke the Rules as Written to give automatically successful initiative to a PC or NPC, and in others(most others) it won't be appropriate.
Since it's what I've been saying from the start, I'm happy with this, my point being that in most circumstances it works perfectly as written and after that, in 5e spirit, there are local rulings or interpretations.
No, I did not since it's honestly a very bizarre reading that aas usual leads o contradictions as someone else has already pointed out and frankly I did not feel up debating on that. But since you insist, I will go and trounce it soundly.I noticed you didn't respond to the proof you asked me for and I provided in post #100.![]()

A table at the tavern talking with a trusted employer, though. That could work for what @Lanefan is saying.
It might, but then it's such a standard tavern brawl thing that it would not be surprising, it would be expected.

Yes and no. There has to be an act(not action) that starts the combat. A declaration by itself does nothing, because literally nothing has happened. A barbarian says he charges at the orcs. In the game the charge(movement and attack) hasn't happened yet, but in the fiction the barbarian has started to yell, lower his body and take the first step forward(the act). This starts the combat and initiative is rolled. A rogue declares that he is reaching for his dagger to throw at the courier that he just detected is a vampire. In the game the action hasn't happened yet, but in the fiction the rogue's hand is suddenly moving towards his dagger(the act) and initiative is rolled. That act starts the combat.
If you try to trigger combat only off of a declaration and not an act, then in the fiction that barbarian is still non-offensively standing around and the rogue is just talking to the courier. There's literally nothing to trigger a combat and initiative roll.
So acts start the combat, but the declared combat actions themselves haven't happened yet.
And I don't need to add anything to show that your interpretation does not work, since the act/action itself (throwing a dagger) cannot both start the combat and having not happened yet. You have contradicted yourself once more, proving that it's the intent of the action that starts the fight (and possibly the premises of it, like putting your hand on a weapon, reaching inside your jacket, etc. or just taking a more agressive stance), but that the actual act/action only happens during combat after initiative has been rolled and is therefore subject to that order.