Maxperson
Morkus from Orkus
So a professor should give his students the answers to the test because they have gaps in opinion about the subject? A company should reveal its trade secrets because there are gaps in opinion about them?The situation doesn’t determine it. Someone has to actually decide when to share information. That person may base it on what they believe the situation demands… but that doesn’t mean there’s not a person deciding.
And as this thread has shown, there’s clearly a pretty significant gap in opinion about when something would become apparent.
Hence, my tendency to not withhold relevant details without a strong reason.
You have yet to show that the gaps warrant the revelation of those details.
Useless precision is worthless.I said that were more precise.
That is virtually useless or often entirely useless. When I walk into a shop to buy stuff, knowing the shopkeeper's AC is 12 and he has 2 hit points does zero to add to what is going on. More information doesn't equal greater usefulness or even greater options.It’s really not. It’s description… plus numbers. It’s literally more information.
And I don't. 40 years of playing and I've yet to meet someone who had trouble with a phrase like "Pretty difficult." That's hundreds of people by the way. There can't be a lot of people for whom understanding "pretty difficult" is a problem.I think that the number of people for whom the numbers are a problem would pale in comparison to the number of people for whom a phrase like “pretty difficult” would be a problem.
No. Not unless they spar constantly and for a long time. The variable d20 and variable longsword damage would make +2 nearly impossible to spot in the fiction. Even if they do spar constantly, they would have to record each match over a long, long period of time to get the law of averages to kick in to the point where they could figure it out.Let me ask you this… if you have two fighters and they both use longswords, and one has a +8 to hit with it, and the other has a +10 to hit… do the characters know which of them is a better swordsman?
You'd be objectively wrong about that. There's nothing arbitrary about my playstyle. It's based in reason, which precludes it being arbitrary.Special abilities like that are a little different, I’d say. But I would also say that you are arbitrarily choosing to keep them hidden.
Mine too. Numbers are not generally observable.Now, I’m not saying you have to share everything about an opponent. My approach is if it’s generally observable, I don’t quibble about it and just share it.
One includes more realism than the other. That's a fact.This means that a brick wall with flies on it is more realistic than a brick wall with no flies on it.
Which is just not true. There are plenty of brick walls without flies on them in the real world. Neither of these two things is more realistic than the other.