That's when you have the random orc that killed him shapechange back into a red dragon, smile and fly off.
I have sent an e-mail to the player and will get to discuss the game with him before we play on Saturday. I'm happy that I got a new player because they are rare where I live. I don't want to rock the boat but it is my house and I have three small kids. Now I'm pretty sure that my friend (who also happens to be my supervisor at work) wouldn't invite some creep to my house, but still, I think asking me first would have been in order.
Okay, I have two players in my game with room for two more. Suddenly out of the blue, one of my players fires me an e-mail saying "hey one of my buddies wants to join the group, here's his character he'll be there the next game" (which is this coming Saturday). Great, I have a new player.
Gaming with your supervisor sounds terrible. I think I'd hate that, I hope your relationship with him is solid.
Maybe you should consider trusting your friend's judgement. Give him the benefit of the doubt. Maybe it will work out.
Personally I reserve the right to include and exclude players entirely at my own preference. I've had enough of players trying power games on me, wanting me to chuck out somebody they don't like. And if a player annoys me enough I'll exclude him and I won't ask anyone's permission.
Obviously as a player I respect the GM's right to include and exclude players at their whim, likewise. It's very important that the GM be happy with the numbers, personalities, and other aspects of the group and that the players respect the GM's decisions.
Out of curiosity, do you (and others) view a game you GM as "my" game or "our" game? Assuming the other players aren't jerks (read: I enjoy playing with them), the opinions of the players should matter.
I'm right there with you. The new guy could be the coolest, best player in the world, but it's polite to ask before inviting someone over to your house and into your campaign.I trust his judgment just fine. My issue is that I could have been asked rather than told, that's all. Just a courtesy thing from my point of view considering we're playing at my house and I have three kids.