overgeeked
Open-World Sandbox
It all depends on how the referee approaches it. If they're railroady by nature, they're going to use their worldbuilding as a straight jacket for the PCs. If the referee is big on player agency, they're far less likely to use worldbuilding as a straight jacket. But the existence of frustrated novelists in no way precludes the existence of player-agency focused referees who like to worldbuild.Sure. I think most of us have. It's a bit of a novel take, but I appreciate the positive idea that GMs can indulge in worldbuilding as a hobby while viewing it as useful practice to help them run player-responsive games.
The premise makes perfect sense. The better a handle the referee has on the world the game is set in, the easier it will be for them to have answers for seemingly unrelated questions. I don't get the impression that Matt Mercer is a frustrated novelist, nor that he limits player agency, but I do get the sense that if you asked him about the crop rotations of some far-flung village only ever named on a map...he'd have the answer.