MichaelSomething
Legend
This is why I advocate for incorporating improv into D&D! To get it away from rule lawyers and push it towards group fiction manipulation.
Depends on what the players and GM are using improv for. "Group fiction manipulation" can mean a lot of things.This is why I advocate for incorporating improv into D&D! To get it away from rule lawyers and push it towards group fiction manipulation.
No one wants to think of themselves as the GM who needs someone else to tell them the rules.Every time this comes up in a forum, someone suggests a new term for "player who actually knows the rules." But none ever seem to stick.
Yet I have met a lot of gms who don’t know the rules at all and think this somehow makes them better than those who can run a consistent game.No one wants to think of themselves as the GM who needs someone else to tell them the rules.
I'm not sure how improv intersects with rules fidelity.This is why I advocate for incorporating improv into D&D! To get it away from rule lawyers and push it towards group fiction manipulation.