Don't want to go all Dickensian on you, or dicktate what gets posted in forum.
But thanks, I'll be more than happy if I haven't spotted another dick all day long.
LOL!
Dickensian, huh?
As Oliver said, "Please, sir, may I have another?"
Discussing player styles _can_ be useful. The problem is that it doesn't ever actually stop at discussing; you get this thread. Arguing. The difference between a discussion and an argument being defined by me as "A discussion is an exchange of ideas. Additionally, a discussion sometimes also contains a possibility of one person influencing another.
It all depends on how you read the thread, I guess. I'm not heated or trying to argue things--just simply stating my case.
I do notice that some come back a bit forceful, and some seem to take my comments as "argument". But, I think that's the nature of a forum.
Especially when you're talking about something people feel strongly about.
Discussions, I dig. Arguments... *shrug*... I've got a cat.
My sentiment exactly, except I've got a dog. My dog loves me. My cat is dead.
Page 42 is a singularly fantastic tool for a GM to use in 4E.
If you have to say that the GM has power because it says so on pg. blah blah of the rulebook, then you are missing the point of this thread.
If I had to sum down the point of this thread into as few words as possible, I'd do it in just one sentence:
The GM IS THE RULE BOOK.
That's the point of this thread.
Get that. Get the thread.
When players have to "trust" the GM, this is really saying that players have to accept negative rulings based solely on an arbitrary GM decision, especially when it might not make any sense, and when it is almost certainly going to be different the next time around, and also be affected by favoritism. I don't call it trust. I call it surrender.
Then you don't understand the point of this thread, either.
You've got to play with a GM that you know will treat you fairly and won't be subject to favoritisim. (I can't figure how playing with a GM under any style of play can be fun and good if your GM is playing favorites.)
If Gandhi were running the RPG session, I might trust him.
Good lord! You'll never trust your GM!
I think that's more your problem based on this statement.
But the reality is that most gamers are genuine geeks and nerds, and social grace isn't found at the surface or core of our beings.
Good gosh, brother, who are you playing with? My group isn't any of those things. I wouldn't characterize us with any of the terms you use.
I'll say that we are very aware that there is a stigma about role players out in the world, and my group tends to hide what we do from the world. I work for a large financial firm downtown. Nobody has a clue that I game. One of my other players actually hides it from his wife.
Some people embrace it, I know, but I've been down that road before and lived to be sorry for it.
It's a shame, though, that me and my group have decided to "stay in the closet" so to speak.