Maxperson
Morkus from Orkus
So you are good with "I use my insight to see if the orc is lying?"
Other than it violates the rules, it seems the same.
So you are good with "I use my insight to see if the orc is lying?"
If I understand you correctly, then we follow much the same process: I let players call for checks. I view that as simply narrative rendered in an RPG jargon. Where I apply "only the DM calls for a roll" is that I will allow or disallow the check as seems right to me.There was another thread that linked to a blog by Angry DM that, among other things said that in order to play D&D 5E the "proper" way a player will never state "I make an insight check".
...
How would this specific scenario play out in your game? If you have a strict "only the DM calls for a roll" what would Bob have to do or say to indicate that they are suspicious in order for you to call for an insight check? What would Susan have to do or say to indicate her PC believes whatever the merchant says?
Here is where I get thrown or just maybe do it my way...Sure, but for me there is significant difference between "Can I make an Insight check?" as in the OP and your "Can I make an Insight check to try to tell if he is lying?" At least with the latter I have an idea what the PC is trying to do that is more specific than "figure out something that might (in the player's view, which may not be the same as mine) be covered by an Insight check."
No, it’s like comparing “I observe the orc for any telltale signs that it’s lying.” vs “I make an Insight check.”That's like comparing "I insight the orc" vs "I use insight on the orc because I think he's lying to me". The comparison based on the discussion is more along the lines of requiring "have at thee orc, taste my blade" to initiate an attack. Better immersion but unnecessary.
The fact that the insight check resolves studying body language blah blah to suss out intention such as lies, hostility etc foesnt to me say that the player then has to guess what they will find. I dont need to know what you are looking for to tell you what you see.
"I look down the alley" doesnt need "to see if there are orcs" to be told "you see orcs" or "you see kobolds".
Similarly with insight, study body blah blah, if the things that are observable are "he is hostile and about to attack" and not "he is lieing" that's what I give.
And you would be wrong.
Maybe in the specific example you’re referring to it does. But first of all, that was not clear to me from the request to make an Insight check alone, and second of all, there are many other situations where “can I make an Insight check?” means something else. I’m not interested in trying to guess what the player’s goals and approaches are based solely on the name of a skill they think would be applicable.
Last bit first, it depends on the outcome of the check.I'm with @Harzel on this one. People will often fail to see what they aren't looking for, so it doesn't make sense for me to just hand out everything someone might possibly see with an insight check. Further, there might be 10 things insight could reveal, ranging from DC 5 to DC 25, and I'm not going to just stop the game to figure all of that out before the roll happens.
This isn't about obvious things. Again, obvious things are obvious and you aren't going to be making rolls to see a bunch of kobolds standing in an alley anyway. This is about whether or not there might be a piece of wood on the ground in the alley.
I don't know everything in the alley and if the player wants his PC to find a piece of wood, he's going to be sorely disappointed if he just tells me that he wants to make a perception check when he looks into the alley. He will be far better served by telling me, "I look down the alley and check to see if there are any pieces of wood lying on the ground."
What if he's about to attack, lying about being at the bar last night, hiding that he is the barrister's brother, hiding that he knows who killed the cook, hiding that he was present when the cook died, and feeling guilty that he cheated on his wife. Are you going to just give the player, "He's about to attack, lying, hiding three things and feeling guilty about something."?
I don’t think you understand what I’m saying. “I attack the orc.” is not the same statement as “I make an Attack roll.” This should be obvious.
Did you specify wooden rats?So would it be acceptable if I stated that my goal was to determine the true intentions of a creature and search out a lie or general intent and that I'm going to do it by gleaning clues from body language, speech habits, and changes in mannerisms? Because that falls under 1.2 in my categories.
Which of course is just reformatting the insight skill to fit into the "goal and approach" pattern. I personally find that pattern unnecessarily artificial, I think "Can I make an insight check" is a perfectly good shortcut. YMMV*.
As others have stated, if I'm taking my time to look carefully down an alley I don't need to state that I'm looking to see if there's rats. I'll also have a chance to see the giant spider as well. If someone is making an insight check they may discern that the target is lying or they may detect that they're telling the truth but not the whole truth or that they're being honest but seem to be nervous about something else. What I need to know is that the PC is studying the NPC closely and trying to get a read on them. Frequently that's handled by passive checks in my game, but not always.
*YMMV of course is just a shortcut for your mileage may vary which is in and of itself a shortened version that has an accepted meaning based on convention and history.
Sure, but for me there is significant difference between "Can I make an Insight check?" as in the OP and your "Can I make an Insight check to try to tell if he is lying?" At least with the latter I have an idea what the PC is trying to do that is more specific than "figure out something that might (in the player's view, which may not be the same as mine) be covered by an Insight check."