But isnt this whole thread people saying "compromise" while restating their hard line? Be that a "worldbuilding project," or the "no restrictions" mantra?
It seems to me that only a few people like
@EzekielRaiden have expressed a desire to actually compromise. Most just say, "My way must win."
It has not seemed to me that folks calling for compromise are actually saying "my way must win".
They are instead saying "you can't piss on my trouser and tell me it's raining."
Imagine a robber-baron "compromising" with someone he's stealing land from by saying he'll hire her, at a wage well above entry. From his position, he probably thinks that's a generous offer, he is after all agreeing to an employment contract. But from her perspective, this is a man trying to get her to be okay with him stealing her land, and buying her off with an above-minimum-wage job. That's not a compromise, even if one side thinks it is. If the robber baron has the power to unilaterally just make this happen, that doesn't suddenly make his proposal a compromise when it isn't.
An actual compromise would be the man agreeing to pay a fair price for the land, and her accepting that genuine offer, then they go their separate ways.
In a similar way, being told "well you can't play a dragonborn, but you can come from the Dragon Clan of barbarians and call yourself a 'dragonborn', but you'll be human" is not a compromise. And yes, that is a real example actually floated in a previous thread like this, from the pro-GM side. A "compromise" sincerely proposed, but clearly with the awareness that it would be rejected....something that was characterized as unreasonable, petulant demands from a player.
So yeah. There's a great deal of talk of compromise. I find most people on the "GM empowerment" side are very prone to proposing false compromise that barely even pays lip service to what the other side wants.