[MENTION=6786202]DaveDash[/MENTION], I've read this entire thread, and I can't find anyone claiming that the DM should make decisions without ever even considering everyone else at the table, or claiming that it is only the DM's game.
I see people claiming that the DM should have X amount of authority vs. Y amount of authority, but in neither case do people seem to be arguing for "all" or "none." It does seem to me, however, that some people on each side of the discussion view the other side as arguing for all or none.
People are arguing a matter of degrees, and reacting as though they're absolutes.
Actually, I'm going to disagree with you here. Way, way back in the thread, in my first post in this thread, in regards to the very first point on the flow chart, I asked:
me said:
Not to be a killjoy, but, "makes sense" to who? That's generally where the issue comes up at the table. I've had DM's make all sorts of rulings that "made sense" to them and I'm sure as a DM I've done exactly the same thing. "Makes sense" isn't always what's best for the game.
Read more:
http://www.enworld.org/forum/showth...w-to-Interpret-the-Rules-quot-)#ixzz3NoS13yhX
and I was told, in no uncertain terms:
Sancrosanct said:
The DM. That's really the only person who needs to know how the rules work. He or she is the one running the game, not the players. Also, there's some pretty significant historical precedence that shows that the game can easily be played this way.
Read more:
http://www.enworld.org/forum/showth...w-to-Interpret-the-Rules-quot-)#ixzz3NoSJi8o4
which is pretty much my entire bone of contention. That decisions that the DM makes only have to "make sense" to the DM. My placing a manticore in the game at that point didn't make sense to that player. Suggestion or rule, it doesn't make much difference AFAIC. I put the manticore there, without realising that it would cause any issues at the table because I had no idea that I was using the manticore outside of its climate/terrain.
Funnily enough, at the time, I acted exactly as Celebrim or Sancrosanct or Mistwell have advocated - I told the player that, no, it's my game, and there's really a manticore here, deal with is.
That was the wrong answer in this case. I could have just as easily said, "Oh, wait, the sun was in your eyes. Did I say manticore? I meant wyvern (or chimera, or any number of other honking big flying beasties), roll for intiative." And the argument would have been over, everyone at the table would have been happy and it would have made zero difference to the game.
Instead, it turned into a kinda big deal, not a major one, just something that stuck out in my head. So, my advice to DM's is that just because it makes sense to you, that's not necessarily always the best solution to the situation.