This is one of those cases where you're being, if anything, overly generous: I've absolutely hit GMs who would not let players add something as simple as a village their character from, because they assume a player will take some sort of advantage from it or simply don't want players adding anything of any real footprint at all.
I'm not suggesting this is anything but an extreme case, but given I've seen more than one of them, I have to assume its an example of where some of the same mindset can go when carried far enough.
One of us has obviously made an egregiously incorrect assumption about if @AlViking was acting as a paid GM for hire who agreed to a job offer or not. I don't think that the poor assumption is in my part because he has made no hint of any such employer/employee relationship that I've seen.
In that example the gm DID move by allowing the individual to play with changes rather than the original state where the individual simply can not play at that GMs table due to not having an acceptable character.
As many times some of the pro tortle/dragonborn/orc crowd has scolded people about not acknowledging accepting or whatever something the player wants before negotiating by way of total and complete capitulation you&: Ezekiel fail to acknowledge something critical. Namely the fact that the gm never agreed to act as a work for hire paid GM who accepted the prospective player as a paying client and is no obligation to allow a prospective player at their table if the prospective player is incapable of clearing the character creation bar to make an accepted character.
Maybe Minigiant will jump in and remind us all how the gm can say "no you can not play at my table" instead of how players are allowed to leave a game
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