jdrakeh
Front Range Warlock
Really, I don't see how any of these AREN'T reasonable.
That's because you're playing D&D, not James Dallas Egebert's D&D.

Really, I don't see how any of these AREN'T reasonable.
But what I'm wondering is; if the weather was bad enough to cancel the game, then how were the other players able to get together to run their own game?
For me, some rain or lightning ain't stopping me from making it to a game...I love playing D&D during stormy weather!![]()
I called the game because we had a foot of snow fall in a few hours and I have little to no experience driving on the snow. Apparently everyone else did.
A very reasonable excuse, if you ask me.I called the game because we had a foot of snow fall in a few hours and I have little to no experience driving on the snow. Apparently everyone else did.
Ugh.... this has been our situation too. Lots of kids/jobs/stuff getting in the way of gaming and our group of 4 (doing scales of war) has had all kinds of missed games in the past 9 months. We've only played about 5 times in the past 6 months.aboyd said:To be fair to S'mon, there is a valid point in there -- we're merely debating the degree to which we differ, not if the concept itself is bad. I play a game that is set to run every other week. In the last 6 months, we should have had 13 games. Due to "perfectly reasonable" cancellations, we've played a whopping five times. Less than once a month. The game is so slow at this point that I've lost the plot.
I don't understand?Reported.
I don't understand?