Correct.shadzar, try this. Two possible ads for the same D&D game, same DM, same players. Alternative universe if you will.
1. "No tieflings."
2. "No tieflings. No gnomes unless the players make a compelling case for including them."
As I understand your points, tieflings are equally banned in both games. Exactly equally banned. So far I'm with you. But I also understand you to mean that for all players showing up they should get the same impression; that it should be equally understood regardless of which add is used, that tieflings are not permitted, period.
Whereas I would be a lot more receptive to certain queries in the first case than in the second. Because not only do you have legitimate curiousity and all the other reasons that Rel, Hussar, and others have been championing, but you've also got an add with a two word restriction. There's not much context to it. In the second add, the gnome restriction being explicilty somewhat more open correspondingly strengthens the tiefling ban.
Strange. I would think the second would get more queries since I can easy get the question resulting from it be asked "Why might you allow gnomes but not tieflings?"
To which I would probably roll my eyes and answer "I don't like them".
The first is simple, direct, and to the point. there is no going around you ass to get to your elbow with it.
I just cannot see why one would be presented with something so straightforward and not just be able to accept it and move on.
I wouldn't present the second one, but did use it in part as an example.
I guess it boils down to how people were raised and taught as they were brought up.
After a certain age I stopped with the childish asking of "why" to everything and learned some things are just to be taken at face value.
I really don't have the interest in getting into other people's mindsets about every little thing. Nor interest in others that enjoy that sort of thing. There are soap operas and those silly reality TV shows for with "gossip fence curiosity".
Someone tells me "no tieflings" then I accept that and will join all other things, time, etc permitting. If I don't I won't join. If I go and there is someone their trying to add tieflings when the game was advertised "no tieflings", if I wanted the "no tieflings" game that much, I will not remain longer while another player adds them in any way. If i have no opinion and am just fine with or without tieflings I am libel to remain.
So the first case I view like this with the 3 types of people.
1-Players wanting a game with "no tieflings", myself include as that is what I advertised
2-Players who don't care either way
3-Players who want tieflings
Group 3 is in the wrong place because they will upset/disrupt the game sought form group 1.
"You can please all of the people some of the time, some of the people all of the time, but you can't please all of the people all of the time."
I want to be able to please the MOST people all of the time, and don't like the people trying to displease them, and as DM have a job to remove group 3 form the equation, or if the majority is somehow in group 3, will remove myself from it.
Which is why if I were in the habit of running pick up games in stores, and experiences were a little fuzzy, I'd never put out an ad with "No tieflings" in it by itself. If tieflings are all I want to restrict, and I'm that serious about it, I'd put something like, "No Tieflings, Period. No exceptions. Don't even think about asking to play one."
Over wordiness does NOT make things clearer...my own long winded posts should prove that.
