the_fantastic_ms_fox ([personal profile] the_fantastic_ms_fox) wrote2008-04-23 06:21 pm
Entry tags:

I add what to my what and compare it to what now?

I'm reading through and reflecting upon RPG supplements for White Wolf, GURPS and D&D. I'm thinking do they actually expect me to remember any of this? Did I used to play this?

Talk about complicated! If I wanted to memorize charts and tables, I'd be an accountant - that way, they pay you.

I like the idea of RPGs, but they often fall so short. Many RPG writers earn the reputation as a hobby for obsessives - there's no other way to learn many of these systems.

It's ironic, seeing as someone with a basic (i.e. rank novice) background in math, or computer programming, or organization, or especially computer game design, should be able to go over these rules and shake their head: these don't make sense. These numbers don't add up. These probabilities are wacked. Some people can't play this; most won't.

I can see what is at work here. There is an attempt to build a controlled system that models the world and shepherds a story through it; mediating conflicts; arbitrating disputes.

However the longer the attempt, the more stringent the modelling; the more rules, the less accurate modelling it does:
- people can't remember enough rules to play it (no players = no game = no modelling)
- the more rules there are, the more holes there are when rules intersect
- the more attempts there are to control, to automate, the more control slips though

Other ways are necessary; simpler ones.

There are many things like this. Our tax system comes to mind.

[identity profile] bloodykitty.livejournal.com 2008-04-24 05:11 am (UTC)(link)
i think it'd be super fun to play in a more free form game where the gm was completely arbitrary but reasonably fair.