Beau of the Fifth Column was a key member of a human trafficking operation in Florida from 2004-2007. He has never adequately addressed this despite having h...
My coworker who still talks about Ukraine when all the other libs have forgotten about the topic, and who previously tried to get me to watch Vaush, and used to regularly try to encourage me to GM adversarially in my Werewolf the Forsaken game when I gave my other coworker Cliff’s notes on my sessions, has mentioned this slaver positively TWICE.
Uh, anyways, I don’t think restorative justice is for slavers, or that even if it were you should be a multi-millionaire (with money made from your slaving) f-list YouTube celebrity when it’s done.
I know that it’s small potatoes vs supporting the slaver and the pedophile, but my playgroup wanted to be cool werewolves who hunt spider monsters and evil spirits. Nobody is interested in “no matter what you do a mortal journalist gets video of you transforming and starts a nationwide werewolf hunt.”
Nobody wants the random good ol boys you mauled secretly all having silver buckshot. That’s stupid, Steve.
Players who don’t get they don’t know what they want but think they know what they don’t want suck. If you’re a player that means your job is to occupy the world, not to moan until its changed. If things aren’t working then bring it up, but give the DM a chance to cook. Like most good writing isn’t giving people what they ask for, it’s giving them what they didn’t even know they wanted and a player should have the decency to allow the gm to try to accomplish that because that’s what keeps in from being a really complicated dice game. I’ve helped a co-worker with this and the issues with the party he DMs being super over leveled to the point that anything aside from high level combat is trivial by playing recurring Special Guest Stars who are generally way lower leveled and plot crucial but with my own agency. A DM Npc played by a character sort of. Other times I’m my own made up guys. I’m almost strictly about role playing and these guys like to do so but tend to let the power trip get in the way, so when I sit in for the minor arcs I’m good for changing that rhythm up. It’s nice cause I can show up and play how I like at a super low level and mostly relying on wits and it changes the tone for a bit. I’m the ds9 ferengi episodes or tng q episodes or whatever show where a recurring guest character shows up and kinda changes the tone for an episode. I’m only around every so often and it’s a change of pace each time. Plus I work with the dm and make the maps and artwork so I can’t really be an all the time player cause I know what’s happening behind the scenes and help with the story.
My coworker who still talks about Ukraine when all the other libs have forgotten about the topic, and who previously tried to get me to watch Vaush, and used to regularly try to encourage me to GM adversarially in my Werewolf the Forsaken game when I gave my other coworker Cliff’s notes on my sessions, has mentioned this slaver positively TWICE.
Uh, anyways, I don’t think restorative justice is for slavers, or that even if it were you should be a multi-millionaire (with money made from your slaving) f-list YouTube celebrity when it’s done.
Justin King should still be in prison.
Love ttrpgs, hate ttrpg players. Or I guess moreso DnD.
I know that it’s small potatoes vs supporting the slaver and the pedophile, but my playgroup wanted to be cool werewolves who hunt spider monsters and evil spirits. Nobody is interested in “no matter what you do a mortal journalist gets video of you transforming and starts a nationwide werewolf hunt.”
Nobody wants the random good ol boys you mauled secretly all having silver buckshot. That’s stupid, Steve.
Players who don’t get they don’t know what they want but think they know what they don’t want suck. If you’re a player that means your job is to occupy the world, not to moan until its changed. If things aren’t working then bring it up, but give the DM a chance to cook. Like most good writing isn’t giving people what they ask for, it’s giving them what they didn’t even know they wanted and a player should have the decency to allow the gm to try to accomplish that because that’s what keeps in from being a really complicated dice game. I’ve helped a co-worker with this and the issues with the party he DMs being super over leveled to the point that anything aside from high level combat is trivial by playing recurring Special Guest Stars who are generally way lower leveled and plot crucial but with my own agency. A DM Npc played by a character sort of. Other times I’m my own made up guys. I’m almost strictly about role playing and these guys like to do so but tend to let the power trip get in the way, so when I sit in for the minor arcs I’m good for changing that rhythm up. It’s nice cause I can show up and play how I like at a super low level and mostly relying on wits and it changes the tone for a bit. I’m the ds9 ferengi episodes or tng q episodes or whatever show where a recurring guest character shows up and kinda changes the tone for an episode. I’m only around every so often and it’s a change of pace each time. Plus I work with the dm and make the maps and artwork so I can’t really be an all the time player cause I know what’s happening behind the scenes and help with the story.
Whats wrong with a little adversarial gming every now and then between friends?