Maxperson
Morkus from Orkus
I strongly disagree with that, because that implies that I'm forcing them to eat the food that I've prepared. I'm not. I don't cook the food and then railroad them into eating what I've made by putting it on the table in front of them.Where I think the metaphor works most strongly is that the point of cooking is for the food you've prepared to land on the table, so people can engage with it; similarly, the point of GM prep is for the TRPG material/s you've prepped to land on the table, so people can engage with it.
The food that is created and eaten is a collaboration between the DM and the players who are the ingredients of the meal. The DM via prep of potential things and roleplay of the game world, and the players via roleplaying their PCs interacting with the game world. Together they take those ingredients and cook and eat that meal. Hopefully it tastes good, but sometimes it doesn't.
Yeah. When I prep, I'm just prepping possibilities that may or may not happen. I don't cook anything for the players to eat. Any meal is cooked by everyone at the table.Of course, as I see TRPG play, there's a lot more in the sense of creativity happening at the table, plausibly some sort of table-cooking (a la Korean BBQ or hot pot, or maybe something more like a buffet) but no metaphor is perfect.







