Yeah, they know each other. Frank has the most wonderful friendsLibertad wrote:Just curious, but do DrPraetor and Frank personally know each other? Because Praetor speaks of Frank like he interacted with him face to face several times.
@DrP: First off, D&D being significantly open-ended is a relatively modern invention. Second, a TTRPG is open-ended by default. It is open-ended in the stories that can be told with it and the ideas that can be expressed through it. To ensure that functionality, the mechanics need to be hemmed in and rigidly defined. Even in a MTP game, you need solid operators to prevent things from going Cops and Robbers on you. Given how you have no idea how to cogently explain your fucking "open-ended" system and your ideas are a shambling chimaera of the shittiest parts of various D&Ds, you'll have to excuse me if I don't follow your reasoning.
You can't even grasp that the system you're proposing is not a single system to govern the use of abilities in one game, but a confused kludge of multiple resource allocation systems that you believe is one system because you want to cram all of them into the same power. Nor do you realize there is no fucking way that can work. What you want is for everything to be distinct, except when it isn't, except when it is again. That is crazy people talk. There is a way to make an open multiclass system; give everyone the same resource allocation schedule (or everyone in an arbitrarily defined power source the same resource allocation schedule), let them freely choose abilities from a list, and let the class come after abilities have been chosen. It's not like you had to hunt for this idea, since Frank and I had discussed it on the page before you started derping up the place again.
We have constantly told you that what you want, in the way you describe it is either impossible, insane, or both. We have been saying this since page one. You are either failing to understand what we are saying, failing to understand your own system, or are being willfully obtuse. Regardless, it has long since passed the point of good faith.