Ovinomancer
No flips for you!
Happy gaming!pretty sure our conversation was over before it started.
Happy gaming!pretty sure our conversation was over before it started.
Obviously a bad GM can eliminate agency in a large number of ways. My point is (and I think has been, pretty consistently) that "The GM Decides" does not inherently remove agency--especially not if, as you say, the GM limits fiat decisions to cases where it's obvious--I'm kinda willing to allow obvious in retrospect, here, because it might not be obvious at the time but it might be obvious later; I'm willing to acknowledge different opinions on that are possible.
I think GM decides serves an opposing design goal to making GM intercession obvious (or removing temptations). I say this because GM decide games put the vast majority of the work on the GM and little on the player. This allows players to be much more casual while playing. Blades, on the other hand, requires a great deal more from the players and so can constrain the GM more tightly. I don't think you can get the ability to service casual players with a tightly constrained GM at the same time. Or, at least, I haven't seen a system that does this.I agree with this. If it is based on honest consideration of the fiction and players can expect it to be all the time there is no issue. There are plenty of other reasons to go to the rules. It is just not necessarily one of agency.
I do think there is something to be said here for removing temptations or making it obvious when the GM intercedes in the way Blades does.
I will explain why this doesn't compute for me. The dice are inscrutable; I have no way of knowing before I know the roll what the outcome will be. I might know the odds, and I might be able to alter them, but on a fundamental level I have no control over the outcome. The GM may or may not be as inscrutable as the dice; I might know the GM's tendencies, or I might not. I might be able to frame the attempted action in such a way that the GM will allow an auto-success, I might not be. I might have more control over the outcome if the GM is deciding than if I'm rolling a die.
I don't see any difference in agency, there.
Another thought: If a failure on a die roll doesn't remove/negate/falsify agency, neither does a failure because the attempted action is impossible. The method by which failure is derived doesn't change the fact that it's a failure, and failure doesn't seem to me to on its own remove/negate/falsify agency.
I think the very specific kind of agency present in Delve play probably isn't the common usage of 'agency' although I completely agree with your reading of Torchbearer and Blades. Common parlance, IMO, is pretty firmly in the "create dramatic narrative" camp when it comes to discussions of agency.
Also, I probably should have been specific about my post in reply to @forgreaver above, that's all contextual to within D&D. Sorry 'bout that.
Here's a good question - what is it, exactly, that we thing D&D does well from an agency standpoint?
It appears the first mention was by @S'mon in post 1121 (ctrl-f is useful). He didn't really define the term, so I can't tell what he meant by it.
I'm struggling with this. I think that it's framed in a way that really highlights Blades' strengths against a caricature of GM decides. The focus on decision mechanic hides a few things. I still thinking through this, so the below is not going to be tight and it'll be muddy as I puzzle through it. I might end up not agreeing with myself. But, I think that my opening statement has some merit and I'm going to go look for it.Let me ask you this.
Say you're a skilled Magic the Gathering player and you're playing a complex deck with lots of interactions that generally has a 40 % win rate (therefore 60 % loss rate) across the population distribution of games against a less complex deck that is fairly straight-forward deck. However, extremely skilled deployment of your deck (and you're well toward the tail of the population distribution of skilled MtG players) can increase that win rate by up to 33 % (putting you, personally, a bit north of a 50 % win rate in the same scenario).
If, before play, someone is privy to (a) both deck archetypes being deployed (even though neither player is aware yet) and (b) the orthodox win/loss rate between these two decks AND that someone is vested with the authority to unilaterally decide that the less complex, higher win rate deck wins before initial hands are even drawn and a single card is played...
...do you find that there is no difference in both actual agency between that and actually playing it and perceived agency by the participants (especially the player of the complex deck)?
We've talked a lot about actual agency, but perceived agency is also enormously important (particularly as moments of play aggregate toward a narrative) in TTRPGs.
Secondarily, but related...
I think you're significantly underselling the agency-significance of all of the other aspects of system (and how they perpetuate agency) that go into the "roll the dice" portion of "say yes, or roll the dice" vs merely "GM decides."
There are many examples from enumerable systems, but lets just stick to Blades because that is one that a lot of commenters have some level of familiarity.
A Lurk (Rogue archetype) PC has the following:
- Special Ability - Shadow: Expend a use of your Special Armor to (a) Resist a Consequence from Detection or Security Measures or (b) Push yourself for a feat of Athletics or Stealth.
- 3 Dots in Prowess (the physical "saving throw" of Blades to resist consequences - so roll 3d when resisting a physical complication).
- 2 Dots in Prowl (so roll 2d when you traverse skillfully and quietly).
- The Stress economy (including all of the agency in manipulating/leveraging/mitigating it...or not).
- The ability to Push, accept a Devil's Bargain, deploy a Flashback and/or receive a Setup or Assist move from a Crew member if the fictional positioning warrants it.
They're on a Stealth Score that features 2 Competing Clocks. If the Mission Clock is filled up before the "Sound the Alarm" Clock is filled up, they succeed at the Score. If not, they may still succeed at the score, but their ability to do so becomes hugely threatened and the knock-on fallout accrued will threaten them for a while to come (more Heat which feeds back into the system, likely a Clock with a faction that has to be resolved in Downtime, other Complications that can emerge through play such as increased Stress, Trauma, Harm etc, etc).
At any point in the above scenario where the Lurk has the ability to (a) deploy Shadow to Push himself for a feat of Athletics (thereby not eating the stress for an extra 1d), now giving him 3d, is positioned to have an ally perform a Setup to change the Lurk's Position from Risky to Controlled (perhaps its a Whisper who manipulates the Ghost Field to distract a Sniper positioned in a Lookout tower in an overwatch position above the courtyard), and can then Resist any Consequence on a 4/5 or 1-3 result (now reduced due to the Setup move) with that beefy 3d from Prowess....OR they can use Shadow again (if they have another box of Special Armor) to resist it.
Or...they can deploy a Flashback.
And remember...all of this tech is player-facing so the GM doesn't get to hide DCs or procedures (which can allow them to use covert Force).
Is it really your position that the above scenario (which, again, I can use any number of player-facing systems for this), with all of the intricacies of its decision-tree and dice rolling, that said dice rolling is yields just as much/little agency/capriciousness/whim as an overwhelmingly GM-facing, GM-decides approach?
Thanks for the clarification. I do, indeed, think character agency doesn't exist, although I made that case the page before I tagged you, so if you were reading around the tag, you might have missed it. It's pretty simple. Characters are fictional creations. Fiction cannot choose. Choice is a key foundation of agency. Therefore, if you cannot choose, you cannot have agency and character agency doesn't exist.I meant the character within the fiction/fictional world having agency. Same way Pemerton used character agency. For some reason you "don't recognise" this concept, of fictional characters having fictional agency, but that's all I meant.
I'd say player agency was player ability to exert change in the world-state. I would NOT necessarily say that players always have agency when PCs are in combat - if the GM fudges to ensure the combat ends in PC victory or defeat, the players are deprived of agency. Following a linear path when required to do so does not give players any agency, even if the world state at the end of the path is very different from the world state at the beginning of the path. OTOH, players certainly don't need control of the metagame as in story-games in order to have player agency.
Let me ask you this.
Say you're a skilled Magic the Gathering player and you're playing a complex deck with lots of interactions that generally has a 40 % win rate (therefore 60 % loss rate) across the population distribution of games against a less complex deck that is fairly straight-forward deck. However, extremely skilled deployment of your deck (and you're well toward the tail of the population distribution of skilled MtG players) can increase that win rate by up to 33 % (putting you, personally, a bit north of a 50 % win rate in the same scenario).
If, before play, someone is privy to (a) both deck archetypes being deployed (even though neither player is aware yet) and (b) the orthodox win/loss rate between these two decks AND that someone is vested with the authority to unilaterally decide that the less complex, higher win rate deck wins before initial hands are even drawn and a single card is played...
...do you find that there is no difference in both actual agency between that and actually playing it and perceived agency by the participants (especially the player of the complex deck)?
We've talked a lot about actual agency, but perceived agency is also enormously important (particularly as moments of play aggregate toward a narrative) in TTRPGs.
I think you're significantly underselling the agency-significance of all of the other aspects of system (and how they perpetuate agency) that go into the "roll the dice" portion of "say yes, or roll the dice" vs merely "GM decides."
There are many examples from enumerable systems, but lets just stick to Blades because that is one that a lot of commenters have some level of familiarity.
{snipping description of Blades in the Dark, which I really wanted to like but really didn't}
Is it really your position that the above scenario (which, again, I can use any number of player-facing systems for this), with all of the intricacies of its decision-tree and dice rolling, that said dice rolling is yields just as much/little agency/capriciousness/whim as an overwhelmingly GM-facing, GM-decides approach?
The Blades player has less authority over their character, and so has less agency in manipulating the state of the character for which they're supposed to be advocating. This is a contrast worth noting. As a GM in Blades, I can essentially declare and enforce actions for your character if the mechanic is a hard fail (and a bit on a success with complication) and still be in the lanes -- this wouldn't be degenerate play. Doing so in a GM decides game is degenerate, because PCs are hands off outside of fixed mechanics. In GM decides, I'd have more authority over character action inputs.
Yes, there's more player input and control and therefore agency in the action resolution mechanics, but much less agency for the GM. This might, at first blush, appear to be good for the player, but it concurrently places a great deal more responsibility on the player. In Blades, that responsibility is further constrained by the requirements to lean into the game and to risk the very concept of your character. That framework puts a lot on the player and does act to constrain their authority in ways a that don't happen in a GM decides game. The price of the clearly agency in resolution is an increased cost in player effort and risk to the character. To put this another way, the player is pretty much required to play aggressively in Blades, to put their character at risk in often crazy ways, and to share some control over that character in a way that might radically alter the PC. These are all limits on agency that don't exist in a D&D game.