IcyCool
First Post
DerHauptman said:OK here is a caveat before people overreact. I love LEW – I think the judges are fair and the current leadership does a great job running the community. So this is not directed at anyone in particular nor is it an attack.
I, for one, appreciate the care you seem to have for LEW. I care about it too. But if it is a mystery to you as to why some people think that you are attacking them, then let me de-mystify it for you. Some of the things you say come off as deliberately insulting. You may not mean them that way, but there you are. But, as long as people can debate here with reasonably clear heads and a limited amount of malice, then things can progress.
DerHauptman said:I just have some concerns about the centralization of power over the current gaming community with a few select people. Also the view that they are somehow uniquely qualified for this because they have experience is a bunch of BS.
I've not seen this "uniquely qualified" bit that you keep pushing (please feel free to link to the posts that contain that, as I probably missed them). I will say that the judges have experience, which makes them more qualified to do what they are doing. That isn't to say that anyone couldn't do what the judges do. I think most people could. But why push an in-experienced person into the position when an experienced person is available?
DerHauptman said:Before, they were just like the rest of us. Saying that hey are the only ones who can now figure out how to successfully run such a community from he ground up (especially since there is a group to turn to for help) without them is, to me, rather an arrogant statement.
Again, I'm sure I missed the discussion, but has anyone said this besides you? If so, I'd like to know, so if you could post a link to the post where it was said, I'd appreciate it.
DerHauptman said:However, what’s the process for selecting the judges who came after them? It’s voted on by only the current judges themselves. The general membership has no say and will never therefore have a real say in the business of the rules.
You bring up a good point, but are incorrect when you say that the general membership has no say in the rules. That is what proposals are for. If a proposal is made, and then passed, the proposer has had a say in the rules.
DerHauptman said:Not so much because impropriety is such a frequent thing but that them membership has no reason to believe it might be happening. I say there should be some voting for judges by the community at large. It was proposed and shot summarily down.
General membership voting on everything is a nice idea in theory. And for something like a club with weekly meetings and such, it works. But there is a problem with that on EnWorld. Have you, perchance, seen how long a wait you can run into waiting for some people to post? Getting a general membership vote would take an incredibly long time. If you thought proposals moved slowly now, waiting for the general membership to vote on it would be excruciating, and the system would be pretty close to unworkable. Having a small group of judges (who are pretty active) keeps things running smoothly.
The idea of having the general membership vote on new judges is a decent one, and provided there are a limited number of judges, it could be potentially workable (if the potential judge didn't die of old age before the vote came in

DerHauptman said:This I say is too much centralization of authority with so few people. I say the rule should be one judge position for one living community period. That way the communities are indeed unique not influenced by the same people over and over. Now that I’ll caveat with unless no one else steps up to take parts of the development of the world then it can be opened up.
I would say that having only one judge for a living community leaves that community to the whim of a single person. I think that's a bad thing. At least with multiple judges we get different opinions.
DerHauptman said:Again, in closing, I love LEW, think it’s a great place but would like to do a living community here with an entirely different feel and tone - choices not limitations. I will ask for the help of and most likely will use a lot of the lessons learned on LEW cause why reinvent the wheel.
I'd play in this sort of living community, but with a certain amount of trepidation. I do not have access to all the books, and as such, some of the more powerful character options are not available to me. That means that in a team consisting of characters who are decked out with said options, I will pull less weight and have generally less fun. But I like to play more than I like balance (usually), so that probably won't stand in my way. Just be prepared for my unmodified Whirling Frenzy Orc Barbarian

Bront said:As a GM, I don't give any mind to who's a judge and who's not. Heck, KO's character seems to have finaly been the second PC killed, the first one having been reincarnated (Who, I believe, was also a judge). If you think we give more credance to the concerns of a judge, then you're questioning the impartiality of a judge.
I believe my gnome barbarian was the first death (he was the one who was reincarnated), but I'm not a judge (and I currently do not wish to be one). After that a 1st-level Orc barbarian died after smarting off to the crew of a ship - while he was aboard. And then I think KO's character Ashnar bought the farm via Phantasmal Killer in "Under the Volcano".