I really hate whenever I try to explain how some bad rules can be abused and immediatelly get someone say shit like “If this happens in your group, change it” as if that would solve the problem. And whenever it is not soemthing you witnessed personally, then it means it never happens and could never happen.

  • acockworkorange
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    1 month ago

    I wouldn’t say it implies a toxic fanbase at all. It clearly states that’s the MO of an apologist. It further states that someone chimes in with that MO. Not a horde, not a group, an individual.

    And I agree wholeheartedly. They are a minority. A very annoying, very vocal, minority.

    The amount of cope is staggering sometimes and makes me disengage from discussing the hobby altogether.

    Even your comment has some cope mechanism embedded:

    The rules are just guidelines

    As if nobody knew that. The guidelines are shit at some points, that’s the whole discussion.

    • Susaga@sh.itjust.works
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      1 month ago

      There’s a thing in D&D forum spaces called the Oberoni Fallacy. The fallacy goes that, if someone says there’s a problem with a D&D rule, they’re wrong because they can just Rule 0 it away. It’s a fallacy because they have just proposed a solution to what apparently isn’t a problem.

      People constantly saying “the rules are just guidelines” to any D&D problem is the same sort of idea. Yeah, I know you can ignore them, but I paid for the damn book, so I want what’s IN the book to actually matter.