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<blockquote data-quote="Mercurius" data-source="post: 8633684" data-attributes="member: 59082"><p>Well again, as I implied in another thread in response to you, I think you are equating your own "rules granularity" with the player base as a whole. I mean, in any context, there are people who get really into the nit-and-gritty, and/or really know their stuff. Meaning, experts tend to be more critical of something within their field than casual folks.</p><p></p><p>For example, an armchair astronomer might come up with a highly speculative theory and among those who care, most will say "Wow, cool," while a smaller number of more technically minded folks (astrophysicists) will say, "That's wrong or unlikely on so many levels."</p><p></p><p>Or think of audiophiles, who might miss the forest (the sound of the music) for the trees (How accurately the sound is reproduced on a stereo system). Or a casual drinker vs. a wine aficionado...it is a bit of expert's curse: you trade in expertise and a more refined palate for loss of a taste for lower quality (or complexity, or granuality) stuff.</p><p></p><p>The point being, for the majority of D&D players, there might not be anything to "fix."</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Mercurius, post: 8633684, member: 59082"] Well again, as I implied in another thread in response to you, I think you are equating your own "rules granularity" with the player base as a whole. I mean, in any context, there are people who get really into the nit-and-gritty, and/or really know their stuff. Meaning, experts tend to be more critical of something within their field than casual folks. For example, an armchair astronomer might come up with a highly speculative theory and among those who care, most will say "Wow, cool," while a smaller number of more technically minded folks (astrophysicists) will say, "That's wrong or unlikely on so many levels." Or think of audiophiles, who might miss the forest (the sound of the music) for the trees (How accurately the sound is reproduced on a stereo system). Or a casual drinker vs. a wine aficionado...it is a bit of expert's curse: you trade in expertise and a more refined palate for loss of a taste for lower quality (or complexity, or granuality) stuff. The point being, for the majority of D&D players, there might not be anything to "fix." [/QUOTE]
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