BSF
Explorer
Chimera said:Why does it have to be seen that way?
I disagree with the philosophy that I need to studiously avoid having my PCs excel in areas where others dominate. This doesn't mean I'm "competing" with them at all, nor do I see it as such when others match my skills.
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Again, it's not competition, it's not selfishly defending my small pile of turf. It's about cooperation to reach goals.
Hey, I play a Bard that is all about buffering up everyone else's weaknesses. He is good at an awful lot of things but excels at very few things. That is actually the role I chose from the outset. Bards do a good job filling in the cracks within a party.
Cooperation to reach goals is great. But which goals? In the game I play in, the group has several goals. As well the PCs have a variety of personal goals. One of the dynamics of the game is trying to reach all of our goals. If my fellow player has a goal of being the best at X in the world and I know that, should I intentionally set my sights on the same thing? By X, I don't mean the best Druid or best Rogue. I mean a specific niche or speciality. In your case, perhaps one of the rogues becomes the trap specialist and the other becomes the lock specialist. Both of you are still skilled at the other task, but you agree that one person will be the best in the group at one task.
Of course, I DM as well as play in a game. My perspective might be a little different. Not better, not worse, just different. Each PC having a spotlight is a good thing because it helps encourage more players to be involved in the game. I always have fun, as a DM, when I recognize that a certain PC has a strength that hasn't come up in the game. When I turn that strength into a story point, and the player realizes his (or her) PC is the go-to guy for this situation, it can have fun results. Both in terms of success of failure. I don't mind overlap in party strengths but the key is that I want each PC to have the potential for that spotlight. So I prefer that each PC have one area that they are "best" at.
But back to the original post, I see no reason why the rogue should be upset. He didn't evidence any real committment to being the best diplomat. There is absolutely no reason why both PCs can't work together and bring greater benefit to the party. As you said, cooperation to reach goals. There can also be a lot of cool RP from this.