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    1. Prince 11 yrs ago

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Temper, Rage and Destruction - A Failure in the Swamp
a collab between Prince, Thought Manifest and Akiblue




All of my worst experiences come from players not GMs


GM's whom provide poor experiences kill their own roleplays, or let them devolve into mediocrity. That's why you have more experience with poor players. You have a choice in what RP's and GM's you involve yourself with.

@Monkey: I lurves pumpkin pie.
I'm iffy about rules. For example, I was pushed through management where I work based on raw capability alone. My scores on formal tests and evaluations were the highest, including above the former GM (now fired) and veteran management. I now act as a Department Manager over the People, which is hiring, firing, resolving internal issues, training, scheduling, etc. Now, I'm also the youngest manager, been there the second shortest, have had my certification the shortest amount of time, etc. I set these precedents to explain that not so long ago, I was crew. I was the guy just being in and out to get the paycheck, work done, nothing else. It's only been a few months. Seeing both side in a work environment, you see your outlook change, but mine being so rushed, I see the stark contrast. Some rules are arbitrary. They're set up with an overall goal in mind, not a situational one. There are and will forever be scenarios when the rules don't apply or can be bend and have quality results without being oppressive. Understanding internal mechanics and structure is key. How does it work? Why does it exist? What purpose does it serve? What does it hope to achieve? What are its detriments? What are its advantages? In what situation is it a larger detriment than advantage and is it acceptable to set the precedent that anyone whom can evaluate its usefulness has the right to disregard it?

Those are a ton of questions I see answered differently not only from manager to manager, but from GM-to-GM and even branch administrators. They vary. There is no "correct perspective" because even at the highest link in the chains, variation exists. That said, the concept applies to roleplay, but roleplay is just as complex. How does a rule work? Why does it exist? What purpose does it servE? What does it hope to achieve? What are its detriments? What are its advantages? In what situations is it a larger detriment than advantage and is it acceptable to set the precedent that anyone whom can evaluate its usefulness has the right to disregard it? That will vary person to person, GM to GM, writer to writer and most importantly differ rule to rule. The issue arises when people begin bending rules for no productive reason. The people who want to go against the norm just to go against the norm. Even in high school, I hated the idea of nonconformity just to make a point. Go to war. See everyone ducking for cover? You bet your sweet ass you're going to conform. If not, you're either soon-to-die or about to score a medal of honor or purple heart, if not just some meager mention on some memorial. There are logical reasons for patterns, but that doesn't always make it the most logical course of action.

Edit: Fuck Pumpkin Spice Coffee creamer. Fuck Pumpkin Spice anything. White Chocolate or gtfo.
Shouta enjoyed the song, although no one joined him. A lot of pansies, if you asked him. Any man that could skewer another, but refused to get on stage only had one ball. What kind of pirate didn't enjoy spotlight? Hell, they spent most of their time, if they were good, avoiding it. The few moments they got to boast should be proud ones. Of course, these were just the general thoughts of Shouta to the whole damned tavern, not anyone in particular. It wasn't until some girl was grabbing at his hand when his song was finished that he even took real notice of the crew. In all reality, she procured his attention far better than Runali did.


"You all talk a helluva lot," Shouta said in his slurred speech. He wasn't aggressive nor did he really sound rude. Despite the obvious poor choice of his words, his light tone made it sound more like a request to slow down. He was, after all, fairly intoxicated. The amount these people spoke was getting too him, and he was hardly in decent shape to effectively communicate in a more poetic manner. He could sing, sure, but these were drunken sea shanties, not some eloquent introduction. Most of what both women said slipped right through his drowned ears, aside from a few select phrases. Before he added anything, however, he grabbed a bottle of whatever spirit he had, then allowed his hand to glaze over a black sheen before cracking it open - literally. Shouta guzzled down the half-filled bottle with a far wider opening, somewhat debuting his abilities while mostly just getting even more intoxicated.

"Ne'er heard of any Stardusk pirates. Guess that's what chur after," Shouta said with a somewhat melancholic tone. He wiped off any remaining liquor from his mouth onto his sleeve before he continued. "If youse want'n judged, you'll have'ta wait," he explained, "there be three whole crews waitin' before ya. An' yes, I killed that rat. Half's crew tried ta pull a mutiny on's ship. Whadn't none of my business 'til the idiot almost sunk the damned ship. I probably busted four'r five other skulls, too, jus' gettin' that wreck back here. I'm sure youse can piece together the rest a that story." Shouta popped off the cork to his other glass, looking around at the small crew. As drunk as he was, he saw a band of merry murders, sure, but he didn't see any collective goal. They didn't seem like criminals on the run, and aside from the captain they didn't seem like kids trying to play pirates. They were an odd crew, if anything.

"If youse ain't familiar with how this goes," he began explaining while pouring his drink, "I'll tell youse what I can without ruinin' my drink. Name's Shouta Takan, but most know me as teh Rookie Judge. Most Rookie pirates lookin' to make a name seek me out after dey hear teh rumors, then I spend a whole month in their crew learnin' about'm." After he explained the very basics, Shouta took another swig of his drink, but it was apparent by his quick paced body language that he wasn't quite done. "Now see, ya basically can't kill me. I haven't met a Rookie in six years that could e'en hurt me; I bet that sword he's got won' leave a papercut," Shouta added. He spoke as if his words were absolute fact, and to him there was little room for deviation. "I publish my judgments once a year in November. About ten or so. It goes out to other crews, some employers, smugglers, the Navy. Can getcha nice jobs, can getcha killed. But teh point is, it gets ya out dere. Ain't nothin' in this whole world more valuable than that."
The Fire Nation conquered Ba Sing Se four years before the Northern Water Tribe fell. There's a "corrected timeline" for things like that. :D

The festival is over. Aside from being tired and having another set of classwork to complete, I should be available.
Uh, I actually was writing my own tavern songs. Lol.
So, to be blunt:

Where the fuck is the entire Ostrich Group?
Dedonus said I think Rare forgot a "not" in his post.


In retrospect, that would way far more sense. I was wondering why he would send him to the literal opposite place he should go.
I'd put him in casual. By his description, he writes 2-4 paragraphs, not 4+, but resents anything below 4 sentences. On average, 4 sentences equates to a solid paragraph. 3 paragraphs is roughly the standard for Casual.
>.> I rewrote a solid 100 years of history for my Avatar roleplay, changing its entire geo-political background while keeping certain select themes. You can use the wiki, but I had to format a lot of information to be applicable. There's also another thought. A wikia isn't a bible of Lore. If you actually look at a Wikia, most pages are fairly short and wrote by fans; it's the central characters that have the most substantial length. If you remove them, chances are, you don't actually have a whole lot in terms of core information. Additionally, a lot of it is plot-based references. Again, this are often irrelevant or only needed for minor citation if you're doing an AU. A continued universe, however (common in Star Wars, Naruto, etc) would find those more useful.

I do like to have available information, though. I've recently became part of a One Piece RP. I haven't followed One Piece since like episode 35, but I was able to do amplitudes of research to create depth, understand the universe, etc. Something to bitch about, I'd say, is either a) a lack of needed information or b) a GM and/or other person responsible for providing information that won't. Fact is, to create anything in depth, you have to have a source. The more your source provides or can provide, the better quality things will be. Even when writing a research paper, not all your quotes, citations and sources will make it into your paper, but likely many of them will have been part of the rough draft, initial writing process or merely brainstorming. The more information and input available, the more you have to work with. Simple. Even if it doesn't make the final cut.
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