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General Tabletop Discussion
*TTRPGs General
"Oddities" in fantasy settings - the case against "consistency"
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<blockquote data-quote="Alzrius" data-source="post: 9253307" data-attributes="member: 8461"><p>Which leads us to ask <em>why</em> you don't have it. Why haven't you worked to develop it? Why not put in the time and effort when people with more experience than you say it's rewarding? Now turn around and put those questions toward the types of learned-skill games that you like, and you can see why they're not questions that can be used to prove much of anything.</p><p></p><p>Which goes to show that people have preferences, as well as inclinations that make certain things easier and more fun for them to learn that others. There's a lesson in that.</p><p></p><p>As you noted, you'll run into the occasional prodigy, but you likewise noted that most human activities are learned skills. Given that not everyone wants to learn every skill, and sees equal reward for doing so, we can dispense with the idea that one person's greater experience is instructive to someone with less experience (particularly if they still have a considerable amount on their own).</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Alzrius, post: 9253307, member: 8461"] Which leads us to ask [i]why[/i] you don't have it. Why haven't you worked to develop it? Why not put in the time and effort when people with more experience than you say it's rewarding? Now turn around and put those questions toward the types of learned-skill games that you like, and you can see why they're not questions that can be used to prove much of anything. Which goes to show that people have preferences, as well as inclinations that make certain things easier and more fun for them to learn that others. There's a lesson in that. As you noted, you'll run into the occasional prodigy, but you likewise noted that most human activities are learned skills. Given that not everyone wants to learn every skill, and sees equal reward for doing so, we can dispense with the idea that one person's greater experience is instructive to someone with less experience (particularly if they still have a considerable amount on their own). [/QUOTE]
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"Oddities" in fantasy settings - the case against "consistency"
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