It doesn't matter how many times he was being dismissive and uncompromising, it matters that he was being dismissive and uncompromising.
Merely saying "no" is not dismissive and uncompromising
It doesn't matter how many times he was being dismissive and uncompromising, it matters that he was being dismissive and uncompromising.
Um, Danny? Argument from authority is a form of appeal to authority. You put forth your credentials, establishing yourself as an expert - like it or not, you are appealing to your own professional experience as a form of authority.
The appeal to authority may take several forms. As a statistical syllogism, it will have the following basic structure:
Most of what authority a has to say on subject matter S is correct.
a says p about S.
Therefore, p is correct.
The strength of this argument depends upon two factors:
The authority is a legitimate expert on the subject.
A consensus exists among legitimate experts on the matter under discussion.
These conditions may also simply be incorporated into the structure of the argument itself, in which case the form may look like this:
X holds that A is true
X is a legitimate expert on the subject.
The consensus of experts agrees with X.
Therefore, there's a presumption that A is true.
Merely saying "no" is not dismissive and uncompromising
And as I've pointed out before, the OP and players may have already discussed and come up with several other HRs- IOW, had other compromises- and in that context, saying no to a single thing is not dismissive.Yeah, it is. For "no" to not be either it needs to proceed something that qualifies the possibility of compromise. Merely saying "No" is a refusal or denial and is usually used in a final context.
And as I've pointed out before, the OP and players may have already discussed and come up with several other HRs- IOW, had other compromises- and in that context, saying no to a single thing is not dismissive.
In addition, we only know that the discussion ended with a no- we have no details as to the actual tone or length of the discussion. For all we know, alternatives were suggested, none of which satisfied the demand for a "load" mechanic.
Since you have assumed that no other compromises existed between the OP; that the rule proposal was met with a flat no, you have reached an unspported conclusion.
This is, to me, where you're blindingly wrong. I've completely dismissed player requests before precisely because I care about their enjoyment.I'm attributing that disposition because I don't agree that a DM who is dismissive of his players requests cares about their enjoyment.
Once again, I never offered that the GM says yes to everything. I offered that the GM should always cooperate and compromise with their players on a request by request basis.
If you disagree with something why is it so hard to say "That's going to be hard but how about we do it this way" instead of saying "No, I'm not going to do that, sorry"?
... I just can't help but heartily disagree. Sometimes, you dismiss player requests because you care about their enjoyment. It's not me out to screw my players. It's me out to make it fun. Our play style is just different. As always, play what you likeI'm attributing that disposition because I don't agree that a DM who is dismissive of his players requests cares about their enjoyment.
... I just can't help but heartily disagree. Sometimes, you dismiss player requests because you care about their enjoyment. It's not me out to screw my players. It's me out to make it fun. Our play style is just different. As always, play what you like![]()
Fine, we can play that game, if you wish. Since you have assumed that compromises existed, you have reached an unsupported conclusion.
In my post, I included the thought that the GM knows more than the players. Then I used two examples of why the GM might be able to make a more informed decision than the players.Heartily disagree all you want. I don't agree with the DM knows best argument either.