Fifth Element
Legend
No, this means that "abuse" in this case is completely subjective. Using the term "abuse" at all here is a bit sketchy, because the DM's authority only exists in an imaginary world.So I can make you an abuser by deciding I don't like your behavior?
What do you mean by a group's "best interests"?It does not intend entirely on the group preferences. It depends substantially, but it also depends on what the group's best interests are, whether they understand them or not, and also on what is real.
Because that's effectively a new group. As I said, arriving at a group consensus as to what is and is not abuse can be complicated and needs to consider everyone in the group.If the group likes it, then it's not abusing them. If the group likes it, but they introduce a new player who finds something abusive, then it can be called into question whether the behavior is abusive.
Possibly, but if that's what the players really want then the DM should do it. If that's how the players want to have fun, it would be a bad idea to force some other form of play on them.That's a facile response. The fact is, such a fight is going to be fun only as a vicarious exercise in absurd destruction.
There's the presumption. And that does explain your objection. So to further the point, whether or not something is abusive depends on the group's preferences and the particulars of the game they're playing at the time.It is an abuse of authority, unless the GM is prepared to follow through with what was promised. If I did this as a practical joke, very well, but it falls on me then to be funny, and probably also to supply the game or an acceptable equivalent at some point. It is always an abuse in a (presumably) serious game, period, because it's non-serious.
My point was that it is not inherently abusive, because there are situations where the players would desire it. If they have a reason to not desire it (such as it being a serious game), then it can be called abusive. But that doesn't change my point, because that falls under the umbrella of a group's preferences.