FrogReaver
The most respectful and polite poster ever
I was responding to him, and he very clearly feels that 4e's choice in language and syntax disempowered the DM by saying "this is what you do" instead of "we suggest this is what you do"
I disagree, because homebrewing and changing the rules is such an integral part of the DnD DNA, I think it is unfair to say that an edition disempowers the DM by not explicitly stating you can change the rules of the game. It is understood, especially by people coming from previous versions of the game, that of course all of these rules are suggestions and you are free to change them.
In fact, many posters on this thread have said that 4e empowers them because the math is so visible, that making those sort of changes that Max feels is disallowed by the 4e rulebooks, was far easier to do and understand the impact of.
Going straight to homebrewing when someone mentions altering rules is the issue. It's the typical D&D debate style tactic - box any rules modification or ruling you don't like into the box of homebrew to devalue the others position.
Max's post wasn't about homebrew.
Maybe more importantly - there are different types of empowerment. Talking about type X when everyone else is talking about type Y probably isn't very helpful.