Gaming Styles – Roll it or Role it?

Twice recently, once on the ICE Forums and the second time here (http://www.stargazersworld.com/2016/10/26/falling-in-love-with-white-box/) the topic of how to check for traps has come up. There are two competing ideas, the first is what I call the Roll it option of declaring you want to check for traps and the GM says “fine, roll your skill”. The second option is you say you want to check for traps and the GM says “How are you doing that?” This is the OSR method or Role Play it version.

My Shadow World GM is one of the “How are you going to do that?” school. In that game I played a thief called Alfred and I was by far the most powerful character in the group. That is not egotism, it was an unfortunate fact. We were playing a high level game and we started out with pregen characters of 10th level. I have talked about this character a lot in the past so I won’t go into too much details. The GM made a mistake in the pregen character which both he and I recognised. The mistake was that in a group with only one fighter, in a very much hack and slash game, where the GM likes to put his villains in plate mail making the thiefs primary OB ‘thrown dagger’ was a serious problem. In Rolemaster it is not the hits that kill you but the criticals. If you have a character where the maximum damage they can do is 3CP and that  is from virtually point blank. Even throwing the dagger from 1′ away from your target incurs a -10 penalty on OB, at 11′ it is -20 and over 25′ it is -30. The character had a built in penalty to every single attack, extremely limited ammunition and pretty much anyone he fought could moving into melee in the next round and attack with a greater proportion of their OB than I could hit them with than I had used to attack them because of range penalties. The GM had given me AT5 with is a bit of a walking death sentence so overall beind cast as the second fighter in the group was not good for my prospects.

My solution was to immediately start developing two weapon combo and thrown dagger in the off hand. If I could only do tiny amounts of damage then I may as well try and double it up. The character was given Adrenal Move speed anyway so I could at least attempt to get 4 attacks in in the first round. If I could do 4 criticals then there was a chance I could put my foe down. Of course this was a long term solution as it was going to take many lavels to build up a new weapon skill and two weapon combo.

The GM soon realised that I was not effective in the role he had pretty much assigned me. In fact our first few combats went pretty badly. The fighter had been given 2H Sword and Frenzy and his best skills. The ranger was great with a long bow but was terrible with his shortsword. The fourth character was a magician. Our first four fights were all close quarters combats inside a tower, mostly on the stairs. Things did not go well.

The GM wanted a quick solution that was to dish out some powerful magic items. The fighter got a pair of laen broadswords and that motivated him to start investing in his secondary weapon and two weapon combo.

For me he gave a set of three uber daggers. They were +30 when thrown and hit as broadswords. At the end of the round they longdoored back to their sheaths. So all of a sudden from doing one ineffective attack each round I went to three full on broadsword attacks. I was throwing two of the daggers with my primary OB and one with my evolving off hand OB but with a useful professional bonus, plus stat, plus +30 for the weapon and just a few ranks made for an OB up in the 90s.

Within three game sessions I had totally eclipsed the fighter as the main battle tank in the group. I coordinated well with the mage and between us were were taking down the lions share of the enemy before melee even started. I had also from the very first time I spend DPs starteed to invest in a spell list. Concussion Ways was my first choice

But I was not a fighter I was a thief. It was me that scouted out the way ahead, it was me that defeated traps and opened the locks. Thieves are very much the skill using profession and they get a lot of skills very cheaply in RM2. Compared to almost everyone else I could ‘do it all’.

The GM had created this monster and in doing so he was finding it hard to challenge us. We played the game for seven years and during that time I tried to select magical items from our adventures that gave daily spell effects. So I had my own spells from just a few open channelling lists plus a handful of other spells that could be used a few times each day. Magically I was like a little low powered hybrid with maybe thirty spells to my name. Given that all my spells were 5th level to less my 50 powerpoints went quite a long way and then I gained a x2 multiplier so I pretty much had unlimited spell casting. In combat I was a death dealing gattling gun of magical daggers. The GM still used the combat phases so missile attacks, the GM included throw attacks in this phase, came before melee and movement. Out of combat I was the one with the broadest skill set.

I think the idea of ‘role playing your skills’ was introduced to try and limit my power in some respects. As I was accelerating away from the other characters in the party my skills were improving rapidly. So when I approached a lock I was throwing a +120 to +140 skill at it. Even absurdly difficult locks were 50/50 and in that situation I would use meditation that gives a +20 bonus. That pushed the odds to 70/30 in my favour. You cannot fill the world with everything being so insanely difficult that all rolls are made at -70 just to make it challenging. That was when the GM suddenly started asking me ‘How’. so when I said I wanted to check a lock for any traps he would reply with ‘How was I going to do that?’ This sort of had me on the back foot for a few minutes until I could think of a few logical methods for what I wanted to look for and how. As I am a RoleMaster player I started thinking abou this. If I am looking for any additional holes that could be exit holes for needles, for trying to feel for any weak spots or dimples on the wood that may suggest they are just a thin veneer hiding points where needles or blades may come from (just as examples) why am I not now using General Perception? If I was not a a thief profession and I asked my GM the same questions in the same situation he would probably allow me to roll perception to see if what I am looking for is discernable. No GM is ever going to say “No, you cannot roll to see if you can see that.” when the player is stood right next to the thing that they want to look at. They may not see it but that is another issue.

So if my knowledge as a player is less than a 23rd level thief is my thief’s ability limited by my lack of knowledge? Do you ask the healer exactly how they are going suture a wound? How the mage is going to cast fireball? I have never heard of anyone trying to use this roleplaying technique for anything except the stealth and subterfuge skills.

In the example of OSR role playing on the ICE forums the example given was again the poor old thief.

A thief suspended from a rope to steal something.
I defy anyone to describe their character doing it like this and not to end up on their backside with a duff roll at some point!

On another point if you are playing the thief character, you can possibly bring rangers into this as well, and you are asked “How are you going to do that?” you could quite possibly come up with a dozen suggestions. Each one you describe what you are attempting, the GM describes what you discover. You then try something else and you get the feedback on that and so on. You could quite easily ‘waste’ half the entire game session with just you trying to detect a trap on a chest when there is no trap there to be found. The rest of the party need not have even bothered to come.

I think in Rolemaster with its sophisticated skill system, particularly with the more compact meta skills that Brian and I use the OSR approach is unnecessary. It slows the game and devalues the skills. If you are only as good at Survival as the play playing the character why bother buying the skill? You would be better off just buying more ranks in General Perception as everything from tracking to detect traps to lip reading and interogation can all really be described in terms of perception rolls looking for tell tale signs.

The more I think about this OSR way of doing things the more I think of it as incompatible with the Rolemaster system.

2 Replies to “Gaming Styles – Roll it or Role it?”

  1. This is related to one of the reasons I prefer fantasy RP to SF RP. I personally know too much about computers and programming (and science and tech in general) to be satisfied by their representation in games. It breaks my suspension of disbelief all the time – “computers just don’t work like that”, “the way hacking works in this game is laughable” are common thoughts. as are thoughts like “a 50 cent battery can power an LED torch for months in real life but my 1,000 credit 30th century atomic torch needs to be recharged after 4 hours of use? really?”

    I know lots of medieval reenactors who have the same attitude to RPG rules about weapons and armour, for the same reason that they laugh at Hollywood depictions of sword fighting….for someone who knows the subject well and has real-life experience, it’s ridiculous.

    Fantasy and magic, though, are different. magic isn’t real, nobody can know how it works so it’s easy to just accept that that’s how it works in the game and get on with playing. Other players without advanced computer skills may feel the same way about SF games involving computer tech. Indistinguishable from magic….

    Also, i play RPGs to play a character that can do things I can’t (or won’t) do in real life. like casting spells or burglary, or murdering orcs and stealing their loot. Playing a computer geek is too much like real life so not that much fun for me. OTOH, I know my limitations as a player and always choose high intelligence no matter the point cos and, even when another attribute would provide far more benefit to the character, because i’m just incapable of playing a dumb character – it would be too frustrating for me as a player to be able to see an obvious solution but be unable to say it or act it out because my barbarian warrior was a cretin.

    I think the “OSR way” as you describe it is incompatible not only with Rolemaster but with roleplaying in general.

    If your character does, says, or knows things that you (the player) know that he can’t possibly know then that’s meta-gaming (i might know how to make gunpowder in a low-tech setting, but my character almost certainly doesn’t, and isn’t likely to just stumble across the relatively simple chemical process).

    It’s also meta-gaming if you’re forced to describe exactly how your character is going to check for traps, pick a lock, pickpocket someone, cast a spell, parry or swing a sword, climb a mountain, or anything else….including requiring that players come up with a speech worthy of Shakespeare and deliver it as well as a professional trained actor, whenever they want to use an oratory, diplomacy, or persuasion skill – and do it in 60 seconds or less.

    if a GM did to me what yours did to your thief, I’d object as politely as possible something along the lines of “Are you (the DM) a highly skilled 23-level thief? No? Well neither am I. But my character is. He knows what he’s doing, he’s an expert at his craft, so please stop forcing me to second-guess & kibbitz him and just let him do his job”.

    Demanding that of a thief is the same as demanding a caster describe exactly how they’re going to cast a spell, what biological or magical or metaphysical processes are involved in using and controlling magical energy. It’s not possible for anyone to do that (unless it’s the movie psionic style of “I’m going to scrunch up my face and grunt a bit”, resulting in wizards constantly being offered laxatives wherever they go), which would make spell-casting impossible in a game.

    1. Like you I am an IT professional and I find the portrayal of IT and hacking in most TV, cinema and RPGs to be rather sad. I remember watching one TV programme a few years ago and the ‘hacker’ many lines of code on screen but the menus and toolbox around it was from MS Paint. If you can hack anything using a bitmap of code I would be seriously impressed!

      I think Sci Fi roleplaying works well in the near future setting. You don’t need the high tech equipment lists, if you can buy it on amazon then that gives you the prices and even the weights and capacities of most things. You don’t need to extrapolate the computing power as we all know what they can do as well as how long mobile phones batteries last and how much data they can hold and so on.

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