Oryan77
Adventurer
Dude, there you go again...missing the whole point of this thread. It's been mentioned several times by several people, your comparison holds absolutely no weight in your argument. The guy didn't go and read some books on his own without realizing that one day, in the future, he will be playing a game that he just happened to have prior knowledge of. No, the guy found out that there is info relating to the game that he will be playing, and when knowing the DM didn't want anyone to read it, he went and read it.Engilbrand said:Are you telling me that no players ever look through the DMG? MM? What about a campaign setting book? I've read a lot of Eberron stuff. I even did that when I was playing in a game. So? Would I get a stern talking to for knowing that Kaius is a vampire? OH MY GOD! That was a spoiler, wasn't it? Darn.
Let's use your comparison as an example:
Acceptable = You're 10 years old, you pick up an Eberron adventure and read it because the cover art looked cool. At age 18, you join a group and they happen to run the same Eberron adventure you read back when you were 10. Darn, you have info about that adventure, but oh well, you didn't purposely learn that knowledge to have an advantage in this DM's game.
Bad = You've never played or read any Eberron adventures. Your DM says, "Hey, I'm going to run this specific Eberron adventure. I just want to make sure you don't buy this at the store and read it because it has cool cover art". Then 20 minutes later you're reading the copy of that adventure that you just bought at the store only because the DM told you he was running it.
It's not about having the prior knowledge to the game...it's about intentionally obtaining that knowledge when you knew the DM asked players not to. If you can't see that as wrong, then you're a class act :\
High horse? Any less than you? Yeah....whatever man.