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General Tabletop Discussion
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Waibel's Rule of Interpretation (aka "How to Interpret the Rules")
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<blockquote data-quote="Celebrim" data-source="post: 7656426" data-attributes="member: 4937"><p>Yes, 10+ years of talking with Hussar and reading his opinions.</p><p></p><p>He may well have handled it badly. That doesn't however imply that he was wrong to have placed a manticore in the forest, or that because he handled it badly that the player was less wrong for making him handle the situation in the first place.</p><p></p><p>Hussar has been burned a lot. He's also a very demanding player. He's settled for himself on the idea that the solution to all these emotional table conflicts he's told us about over the years - and there are a bunch of them - is simply to accept that the DM is always wrong and to always work with the player. And as far as it goes, it's probably a big improvement from what he was doing or how he as a player had been handled at times.</p><p></p><p>But the fact that he feels guilty for placing a manticore in a forest, and declares that the player was "100% right". That's just Hussar being Hussar.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Celebrim, post: 7656426, member: 4937"] Yes, 10+ years of talking with Hussar and reading his opinions. He may well have handled it badly. That doesn't however imply that he was wrong to have placed a manticore in the forest, or that because he handled it badly that the player was less wrong for making him handle the situation in the first place. Hussar has been burned a lot. He's also a very demanding player. He's settled for himself on the idea that the solution to all these emotional table conflicts he's told us about over the years - and there are a bunch of them - is simply to accept that the DM is always wrong and to always work with the player. And as far as it goes, it's probably a big improvement from what he was doing or how he as a player had been handled at times. But the fact that he feels guilty for placing a manticore in a forest, and declares that the player was "100% right". That's just Hussar being Hussar. [/QUOTE]
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Waibel's Rule of Interpretation (aka "How to Interpret the Rules")
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