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Aria
Warning: I've not read the rules recently so this may all be clearly stated there, so appologies if it is...

So can a 'realistic form spirit' manifest as anything it wants? Are there limitations on scale / looks / etc...

For example could they manifest as a dragon? An aircraft carrier? A city? Ok, the last two are silly but still, you get my point? I guess a reasonable thing to do would say it has a maximum area equal to the spirit's force?

Thanks
Yerameyahu
AFAIK, the rules are totally vague. It gives a couple examples (car, toaster?), but even those might be problematic. frown.gif
Neraph
Realistic Form only allows it to look real. Mutable Form would be needed to make it look like anything. The two would make the spirit not only look like a toaster, but be able to be plugged in and actually toast toast also. While RAW there is no size limit for spirits, there should be some sort of logical endpoint - as always, your GM is the final arbitrator in that matter.
The Jopp
QUOTE (Neraph @ Mar 3 2012, 04:38 PM) *
Realistic Form only allows it to look real. Mutable Form would be needed to make it look like anything. The two would make the spirit not only look like a toaster, but be able to be plugged in and actually toast toast also. While RAW there is no size limit for spirits, there should be some sort of logical endpoint - as always, your GM is the final arbitrator in that matter.


Would be kinda hilarious if someone electrocutes a manifested toaster spirit by plugging it into an outlet.
Jhaiisiin
I'd allow for a spirit to have a single set realistic form for them to manifest into. That form would work exactly as desired. If they wanted to change to another form, that's what you'd need mutable form for.
The Jake
A spirit with Materialisation has one designated form. Allies for example can have multiples. Where it all breaks down for me is how people can tell a form is 'magical' based on the Force. Doesn't sound like Realistic Form actually offers that much to me...

- J.
pbangarth
QUOTE (The Jopp @ Mar 3 2012, 02:31 PM) *
Would be kinda hilarious if someone electrocutes a manifested toaster spirit by plugging it into an outlet.

The example in the book actually allows the spirit materialized as a toaster to be used to toast bread. It just can't be controlled electronically. In our home campaign, the GM put a limit on Mutable Form, saying the forms allowable must conform to the BOD restrictions for Shapechange, ie. +or - 2.
pbangarth
QUOTE (The Jake @ Mar 4 2012, 01:43 AM) *
A spirit with Materialisation has one designated form. Allies for example can have multiples. Where it all breaks down for me is how people can tell a form is 'magical' based on the Force. Doesn't sound like Realistic Form actually offers that much to me...

- J.

Realistic Form gives the physical shape, and overcomes the 'spirit mask' effect on that shape. To cover the aura, Aura Masking is needed.
Yerameyahu
Even in a limited version, it seems nutty that a spirit can just become arbitrary *functional* things: people, objects, tech (and vague on the limits).
The Jake
QUOTE (pbangarth @ Mar 4 2012, 07:46 AM) *
Realistic Form gives the physical shape, and overcomes the 'spirit mask' effect on that shape. To cover the aura, Aura Masking is needed.


I'm talking physical appearance only. See Street Magic. What I am talking about are embedded rules which are entirely self defeating.

- J.
Irion
The major issue is, they do not change his "armor" or resistance to anything.
So lets say the spirit is a toaster. Hope the DV of beeing "electrocuted" is lower than your ItNW...
(So if you disguise as a toaster make sure to check your countries potential of the outlets.)

Same thing applys for beeing a gun.

So my take is the spirit has to take the punishment. The resistance of a brick of steel againts electricity is sky high...Thats not true for the spirit.

So yes, a small force spirit would be electrocuted. (And no, this is not contradicting RAW, it is just applying ALL rules.)
And yes, a high force spirit could be used for toasting bread. But I would say his force needs to be at least 8. (Unless you do not allow AP to apply for immunity)

An other question would be, how does a human form react to physical damage.
I would rule as a normal human does. Only thing is, if you cut off his arm, it disappears. and the blood you spill disappears too.
(Well, the range here is questionable. The arm could be lying on the floor if it still in the "form area" of the spirit)
But the spirit would not take damage. He could go T-1000 on you afterwards.

A question would be, if he could change his natural damage value with his form or for this he needs the natural weapon power...
(Because actually no matter how spirits look, they do the same damage. So I guess RAW you could have a bladearm and you would still do stundamage.)
Dakka Dakka
It is more than appearance. functionality is also gained by the spirit in realistic form. This means that the plugged in toaster spirit will not be electrocuted nor will the gun spirit be blown up if a bullet is shot from it. The only restriction to functionality is the lack of matrix connection.

No, Irion electrocuting the toaster spirit is not using all the rules, it is ignoring the rules of realistic form:
QUOTE ('Street Magic p. 102')
A spirit that appeared as an object mimics the object’s normal functionality; for example, a toaster could be plugged into the wall to toast bread (though it would have no Matrix link, making it an antique toaster).
Being damaged by electricity (normal current and voltage of course) is not part of the normal functionality of a toaster. So the toaster spirit should be really immune (in the normal sense of the word not hardened armor) against that. The same goes for guns. Normal wear and tear would of course apply.
Irion
@Dakka Dakka
And how is it contradicting?
He could do that, but if he is fried by electricity...
I can jump down the top from the empire state building, does not mean I survive it...

If this would work, it would mean the spirit gets immunity to electricity or at least the resistance to deal with it for free.

So no, I do not think it should work like that and neither do I think it is logical to work like that.
Even as a realistic form spirits still just emulate the properties or the material by mana. So if you want heating coils inside of you, you should be resistant to heat and electricity to begin with. Everything else is silly.

Think of a spirit transforming into a cube/spheare of steel.
Electricity? No damage.
Acid? Neither, if you take the right steel.
Fire? well, a simple flamethrower won't do.
Bullets? Well, after the rules for barriers their DV is cut down to 2 the immunity should do the trick but if you really stick to your argument he would at least get one time the armor raiting of steel...

Anyway: My interpretation does not stop a spirit from doing it. (Not contradicting the rules)
I just apply the rest of the rulebook and not handwave.
The Jake
So what spirit type would mimic the effects of a toaster?

- J.
Irion
@The Jake
It is a power for free spirits. So every free spirit type could do it.
The problem is not really the toaster, but if you let it fly, where does it end?

The question is, does the spirit need the attributes to bull of this stunt?
For example: A spirit transforms into an F-15.
Can he fly? How fast can he go? Can he use jet fuel?

If you allow it, there is no limitation on what could be done.
Yerameyahu
Which is why the whole rule should be scrapped. There's no reason I see for spirits to be able to turn into functional things. Appearing as nonfunctional things is totally fine; all other applicants may go possess a toaster. biggrin.gif
Irion
Which opens the same problems, again.

Now the toaster has a stun monitor. So if you annoy it with a taser it would "die" but not problem sticking (whatever it might be) in the outlet...
Tymeaus Jalynsfein
Or, you know, you go by what the actual rule states and ignore any real world comparisons.
Realistic Form allows you to assume a functional shape. Whether it be a Toaster, a Sword, a Yacht, or a Motorcycle. Some may want to include some sort of Body Restrictions, but really, it is not that necessary. Hell, there is even an in-Canon Ally spirit that takes the form of a Super Yacht, in one of the Novels. Is it really going to be that devastating to your campaign to allow such a thing?

It is a novel idea, I know, and groundbreaking to boot, but really, why must it be analyzed to death and then beat again and again?
Yerameyahu
Sigh. Your solution is *always* 'I'm sure no bad things could ever happen'. smile.gif The point is that the power is so vague that it allows nearly unlimited functionality.
Tymeaus Jalynsfein
QUOTE (Yerameyahu @ Mar 4 2012, 08:39 AM) *
Sigh. Your solution is *always* 'I'm sure no bad things could ever happen'. smile.gif The point is that the power is so vague that it allows nearly unlimited functionality.


So what? Who cares? That is a discussion between the GM and the Player. The fact that it allows near unlimited functionality is irrelevant. It is there to allow you to create interesting ideas and run with them. If you were to demand absolutes all the time, your rule book would be 10" think and still not cover everything; and the game would be absolutely no fun to play, because you would be buried in minutia to the point of non-functionality. If you cannot come to a consensus between GM and the player, on something so trivial, then you are not trying hard enough.

*Sigh* It has nothing to do with "No bad things can ever happen" and you know it. I do not argue from that perspective very often (Even if at our table those "Bad Things" do NOT happen, because the players are mature enough to discuss it and come to a compromise). It has to do with cooperation in having a fun game to play. smile.gif If you are having issues with that, maybe it is not the rules at fault... smile.gif
KarmaInferno
The toaster spirit would be immune to standard wall socket electricity applied to it's electrical plug.

It's probably also immune to the heating effect of it's internal toasting coils.

It would not be immune to any other application of electricity or heat that a normal toaster would not be, beyond what ItNW provides.

I don't see how this is that complicated.


I would say, just because it's funny, that sticking a metal fork into the toaster would cause it to short circuit and possibly fry just like a normal toaster - it's outside the "normal" functioning of a toaster, so it would be treated as an elemental electricity attack at that point.




-k
Yerameyahu
My point is, TJ, that you argue from free-form: everything is okay, because the GM and players will just work it out. That's not what rules-based RPGs are for. The rules are there so the players and GM know the expected envelope for how any given thing functions. We might well say that guns do 'some amount of damage', and let the table wing it every time.

The GM can always fix anything. He shouldn't have to fix *anything*. All the rules in SR4 except the one (maybe hyperbole) under discussion follow this principle, so it's the odd man out. smile.gif
Tymeaus Jalynsfein
QUOTE (Yerameyahu @ Mar 4 2012, 09:01 AM) *
My point is, TJ, that you argue from free-form: everything is okay, because the GM and players will just work it out. That's not what rules-based RPGs are for. The rules are there so the players and GM know the expected envelope for how any given thing functions. We might well say that guns do 'some amount of damage', and let the table wing it every time.

The GM can always fix anything. He shouldn't have to fix *anything*.


Not Free-Form, as I do use the rules, and I am sure that you know that. I argue from the position that the GM has a job to do and he should do it. The problem is that you CANNOT Detail EVERYTHING in the rules, which is WHY you have a GM. There are plenty of vague rules in Shadowrun, and I often believe that it is by design, for a reason. To do otherwise is to never actually produce a rules system. You cannot cover everything in the excruciatingly detailed descriptions and rulings you say that you require. Thus, some guidelines for the GM and the players to come to a consensus upon.

Realistic Form is one of those guidelines. You cannot ask for detailed descriptions of how it is to function, and in what circumstances and situations, because they would STILL be providing them, 6+ years later. Better to provide a guideline and let the individual tables work them out. And No, I have NEVER seen Realistic Form cause the problems that you are indicating MAY occur in-game. NOT ONCE. Maybe that should tell you something. You say to get rid of it... which is interesting to me. I say use it and don't worry so much about every last little detail. Document your decision and move along.

Having a GM make decisions is what he is there for. Otherwise, why would you even need a GM? smile.gif
Tymeaus Jalynsfein
QUOTE (KarmaInferno @ Mar 4 2012, 08:50 AM) *
The toaster spirit would be immune to standard wall socket electricity applied to it's electrical plug.

It's probably also immune to the heating effect of it's internal toasting coils.

It would not be immune to any other application of electricity or heat that a normal toaster would not be, beyond what ItNW provides.

I don't see how this is that complicated.


I would say, just because it's funny, that sticking a metal fork into the toaster would cause it to short circuit and possibly fry just like a normal toaster - it's outside the "normal" functioning of a toaster, so it would be treated as an elemental electricity attack at that point.


-k



Exactly. I agree with you KarmaInferno. Not sure why that is so complicated or difficult to understand. *shug* smile.gif
Irion
@Tymeaus Jalynsfein
QUOTE
Exactly. I agree with you KarmaInferno. Not sure why that is so complicated or difficult to understand.

As is as Yerameyahu says. You may always argue, that everything is OK. There will never be a problem until there is a problem.

The point is, if you argue that way, you do not need rules in the first place. There will never be problems.

Rules are to fast check if something works or if something does not work. If everything works, you do not need rules.
Of course, the second somebody brings up crazy shit, you do not want it to work. So you only have a problem if people bring up crazy shit.
So you have a rule system which should tell you, that crazy shit does not work. (Why isn't it just consense? Well, simple: Not everybody agrees on what is crazy and what is not.)

@KarmaInferno
Why? If you have a good old metal toaster, simple design he is "immun" to any kind of electricity (Short of real lightning or the kind). Do not believe me? Shoot an old toaster with a teaser gun. He won't explode.
Tymeaus Jalynsfein
QUOTE (Irion @ Mar 4 2012, 09:31 AM) *
@Tymeaus Jalynsfein

As is as Yerameyahu says. You may always argue, that everything is OK. There will never be a problem until there is a problem.

The point is, if you argue that way, you do not need rules in the first place. There will never be problems.

Rules are to fast check if something works or if something does not work. If everything works, you do not need rules.
Of course, the second somebody brings up crazy shit, you do not want it to work. So you only have a problem if people bring up crazy shit.
So you have a rule system which should tell you, that crazy shit does not work. (Why isn't it just consense? Well, simple: Not everybody agrees on what is crazy and what is not.)


If you Don't allow problems to crop up, then you have no Problems either. That requires Compromise.
I actually approach this whole connundrum in the following way.

Rules are there to provide the framework. Unfortunately, the Rules cannot cover everything in the exacting amount of detail that some people like. That is okay. That is why you have a GM. People can be reasonable. If there is an Issue, the GM and the concerned parties (The Table, if you will) get to gether and discuss the options and come to a reasonable consensus. Once consensus is reached, you document the result and move along.

One of two things will occur with the above scenario.
1. You get consensus, and the game progresses (The discussion does not have to occur in game, and actually tends to work better if it occurs out of game).
2. You have a Problem Player/GM and you hit a stalemate.
... A. Nothing Changes and you have anim osity.
... B. You eject the problem Player/GM and the game picks back up.
... C. You change Games entirely to something that everyone can agree on.

Now. I will admit that I have been very fortunate over the last 25 years to actually game with people who are capable of reasonable and rational discussion, and are able to come to a compromise. I have never had any type of blowup at a gaming table (though there are occasional heated discussions). Some of you may not be that lucky. However, it is NOT THE FAULT OF THE RULES when that happens. It is a personality dynamic that is at the root cause, and no amount of rules is going to fix that.

*Shrug*
Yerameyahu
I didn't say 'detail everything'. (Nor did I say 'never discuss anything'.) I said 'detail something'. (And 'minimize discussion'.) smile.gif This is the fundamental principle of tabletop RPG; too little is freeform, too much is wargaming.

The Realistic Form/etc. rules are much *more* vague than the SR4 standard. The framework is missing. There is a reason the Shapechange spell doesn't just say 'you turn into some animal'. There is a reason the guns have stats. And so on.

As always, it doesn't matter if you've ever seen it. It doesn't even matter if *no one* has ever seen it. And you do always (always) say nothing is a problem because the GM can just fix it. smile.gif (Or sometimes, because 'no one would be bad'.)
Tymeaus Jalynsfein
QUOTE (Yerameyahu @ Mar 4 2012, 10:11 AM) *
I didn't say 'detail everything'. (Nor did I say 'never discuss anything'.) I said 'detail something'. (And 'minimize discussion'.) smile.gif This is the fundamental principle of tabletop RPG; too little is freeform, too much is wargaming.

The Realistic Form/etc. rules are much *more* vague than the SR4 standard. The framework is missing. There is a reason the Shapechange spell doesn't just say 'you turn into some animal'. There is a reason the guns have stats. And so on.

As always, it doesn't matter if you've ever seen it. It doesn't even matter if *no one* has ever seen it. And you do always (always) say nothing is a problem because the GM can just fix it. smile.gif


There are some things that you just cannot describe down to the last possibility of detail. Some things MUST be vague to allow freedom to choose appropriate descriptives. Realistic Form is one of those things. Shapechange is another. Shapechange is about as vague as Realistic Form is (has a minor bit of restrictions), and with the advent of "rules" for spell creation, is potentially even more of a can of worms than Realistic Form is. And yet it is Canon (And yes, I know you have issues with the Spell Creation rules on occasion as well).

And Yes, nothing SHOULD be a problem exactly BECAUSE the GM can fix it, that IS HIS JOB. To Fix things when there are questions. AND THERE ARE ALWAYS QUESTIONS, you will never eliminate them. Why is it okay for the GM to arbitrate one thing and not another? Shadowrun provides a good framework from which the GM can adjudicate. I just do not limit the GM's contribution, like some others prefer. Hell, I know some that believe the GM's only job is to provide a scenario and nothing more. How Droll...

And again, if the GM is not comfortable with such duties/confrontations, that is not the fault of the rules/system. Saying that a GM should not have to adjudicate is disengenuous, as that is one of his primary duties.

As for it mattering if it is ever witnessed, I think it is highly relevant. IF NO ONE HAS WITNESSED THE ISSUE, then IT IS NOT AN ISSUE/PROBLEM in the first place. How can it be? If I have never seen it to be an Issue, I have to question whether it is truly an issue, or is it a vocal minority claiming it is a bigger problem than it truly is? Often you claim an issue to be THEORETICAL, yet relevant, even when the majority (and sometimes even you) does not see it at their tables, or at conventions. Theory crafting is one thing, but IF IT NEVER ACTUALLY IMPACTS THE GAME, it is a BAD THEORY. smile.gif
Yerameyahu
Again, no one asked for "describe down to the last possibility of detail". And Shapechange is vastly more defined: it must be a mundane Critter within (or stupid-RAW, +/-) 2 Body. Period. That's like 12 options. Realistic Form is literally anything.

And no one said 'eliminate all questions'. You're supposed to minimize them. (I know I've said this three times.) The GM's 'job' (didn't realize he was getting paid biggrin.gif ) is to deal with the stuff that couldn't be minimized. That doesn't mean 'don't try'. The fact that janitors exist doesn't mean you should litter.

And no one said "that a GM should not have to adjudicate […]". Why can't you ever argue against things I actually say? wink.gif

That's not the standard for evaluating theory, TJ, and I don't recall saying that this is a gameplay issue in the first place. (See my last question.) The pornomancer, for example, exists (period). Regardless of whether it ever happens in a game. It is a theoretical shortcoming of the rules. There are uncountable other examples. When you find a hole in the rules, 'ignore it' is not the sole appropriate response.
Neraph
QUOTE (Irion @ Mar 4 2012, 09:27 AM) *
Which opens the same problems, again.

Now the toaster has a stun monitor. So if you annoy it with a teaser it would "die" but not problem sticking (whatever it might be) in the outlet...

You have ceased making sense. Many of your arguments are invalid on this thread.

QUOTE (Tymeaus Jalynsfein @ Mar 4 2012, 09:37 AM) *
Or, you know, you go by what the actual rule states and ignore any real world comparisons.
Realistic Form allows you to assume a functional shape. Whether it be a Toaster, a Sword, a Yacht, or a Motorcycle. Some may want to include some sort of Body Restrictions, but really, it is not that necessary. Hell, there is even an in-Canon Ally spirit that takes the form of a Super Yacht, in one of the Novels. Is it really going to be that devastating to your campaign to allow such a thing?

It is a novel idea, I know, and groundbreaking to boot, but really, why must it be analyzed to death and then beat again and again?

I want to make a F1 Ally Spirit with Realistic Form to turn into a realistic, functional Death Star.

QUOTE (Tymeaus Jalynsfein @ Mar 4 2012, 11:30 AM) *
\Shapechange is another. Shapechange is about as vague as Realistic Form is (has a minor bit of restrictions)...

Incorrect. Shapechange has extraordinarily delineated rules that allow you to only become one of five different animals, chosen from page 292, SR4A.
QUOTE (SR4A, Page 211, Shapechange)
Consult the Critters section, p. 292, for the subject's Physical attributes while in critter form.
KarmaInferno
Letting the toaster be unaffected by wall voltage electricity applied to it's plug, but having it be damaged normally by electricity applied any other way, that's just straight RAW.

The rules state the spirit can operate as the item that it copies.

It does not say the spirit gets any other benefit. It cannot be disassembled for parts. It can't be used to electrocute someone by dropping it into their tub. The spirit toaster can make toast. That's it.

If I were to make up fluff on the subject, the spirit isn't copying the actual item, but the IDEA of the item. So it can do whatever the item is normally expected to do, and nothing else.

If I had an abusive player, I might houserule that only existing mundane objects of reasonable size can be copied. "reasonable size" being whatever I decide. But, really, such a player probably does this sort of thing all the time and as such I'd be more likely to eject said player from my game instead. Not only does such behavior show a certain level of disrespect for me as the gamemaster, it offends my sensibilities as a powergamer - there's tons of ways to min-max that don't rely on such shaky grey foundations.

It isn't a toaster. It's a toaster-shaped spirit. It can toast. That's it.

Again, I don't see why that's complicated.




-k
Tymeaus Jalynsfein
QUOTE (Yerameyahu @ Mar 4 2012, 10:41 AM) *
Again, no one asked for "describe down to the last possibility of detail". And Shapechange is vastly more defined: it must be a mundane Critter within (or stupid-RAW, +/-) 2 Body. Period. That's like 12 options. Realistic Form is literally anything.


Shapechange has WAY more than 12 Options, even with the "Stupid-RAW" as you say it. The fact that there may only be 12 examples of such use is irrelevant, there are literally thousands of (if not more) uses for Shapechange and/or Critter Form. Realistic Form is similar. That is why the GMN MUST be involved in such things. To detail even a significant portion of what Shapechange/Realistic Form is capabnle of is a daunting, and somewhat ludicrous, task to undertake. So, leave it to the interpretation of those who play. DOes that mean that it may be interpreted differently by 100 different people? Yes, but I say So What. That is irrelevant, because it opens up possibilities.

QUOTE
And no one said 'eliminate all questions'. You're supposed to minimize them. (I know I've said this three times.) The GM's 'job' (didn't realize he was getting paid biggrin.gif ) is to deal with the stuff that couldn't be minimized. That doesn't mean 'don't try'. The fact that janitors exist doesn't mean you should litter.


See, that is where you and I are different. I feel that Realistic Form is detailed enough, and generates Minimal questions. Especially at the tables I play at. It has never been abused. It has never been debated ad infinitum. It has NEVER caused an issue at all. That may be because we choose not to make it an issue (as you will liklely claim), or it may be becasue IT IS NOT REALLY AN ISSUE, as I would claim. smile.gif

QUOTE
And no one said "that a GM should not have to adjudicate […]". Why can't you ever argue against things I actually say? wink.gif


You may not directly state that a GM is not required to adjudicate, but plenty of others have said so over the years, here on Dumpshock. And you DO hold that that Adjudication should be kept to as bare a minimum as can be obtained. But my question is by whose standards? The Developers obviously feel that what they have provided is generally enough. I tend to agree with them (for the most part). I do think they got a few things wrong, but in the end, I do not let it get in the way of my enjoyment of the game. I do not angst over whether or not the detail is exactly what I would like, and I trust the GM enough to know we can come to a consensus on those things that may be vague.

QUOTE
That's not the standard for evaluating theory, TJ, and I don't recall saying that this is a gameplay issue in the first place. (See my last question.) The pornomancer, for example, exists (period). Regardless of whether it ever happens in a game. It is a theoretical shortcoming of the rules. There are uncountable other examples. When you find a hole in the rules, 'ignore it' is not the sole appropriate response.


The pronlem is taht THEORY is not always relevant. Theory for Theory sake is actyually bad for an RPG, as far as I am concerned, because it tends to get in the way of actual play. If the Theory is NEVER going to impact the game world, why care about it?

The Pornomancer is a good example of such things. It may exist, out there somewhere at some table, and I can agree that it may indeed exist (kind of Like Quarks anbd Leptons, they exist but I will never see them), but it will never impact play at MY table. As such, theorycrafting about it is useless to me. I will not angst about whether or not I will ever have to deal with it because I won't. I won't have to angst about whether or not I am being fair, because I wouldn't care. I will simply say to the offending player "Nope, Try again, and this time make something that is a realistic character, not an exercise in numerical optimization." See, Simple and solved, with no detailing in the rules that it is abusive and stupid (reference my discussion on Skill Ranks and their relation to Characters, if you are unsure to what I refer). If you (generic) have issues with Extreme Edge cases, and they crop up often enough in your game to have actual Theorycrafting in place to argue your points, then it is not the rules that are the issue, it is the players. If you have no tolerance for such stupidity, then eventually, the problem WILL go away, because the offending player will either get the message and fix their issues (whatever they may be), or they will seek a new table to play at. It is NOT a shoprtcoiming of the Rules, nor is it me "IGNORING" the situation; it is an Extreme Edge Case that should never be allowed to occur within the game itself, and never will at my table. You have those REGARDLESS of the game system, or how much detail is provided in the rules. smile.gif

I don't need extensive and detailed rules to tell me how to adjudicate something in the world. I use the framework of the rules provided, and the actual living, breathing World that has developed over the last 20 years (The fluff is there for a reason, after all) to do so. I do understand that not everyone is comfortable doing so, but saying something is broken because you (again, generic) do not want to take the time to adjudicate something that may be vague is just laziness, in my opinion. The Question would be: WHY do you have such an animosity towards having to make an adjudication in this case? I don't really see Realistic Form as an Issue. Why do You? Beyond a sense that it is Vague and could "Literally do anything," which I do not agree with. It can do anything that your GM is allowing it to do. That threshold will be different for each and every game table out there, as it should be. smile.gif

Incidentally, I do enjoy this conversation. And I am not trying to be a prick about it. I am truly curious WHY you feel the way you do, beyond the point of "I just do not like it." The fact that the rule is vague is purposeful, in my opinion, not a shortcoming of not being detailed enough.

Thanks for participating, regardless... smile.gif
Tymeaus Jalynsfein
QUOTE (Neraph @ Mar 4 2012, 11:12 AM) *
I want to make a F1 Ally Spirit with Realistic Form to turn into a realistic, functional Death Star.


Simple... NO. Try again. See, very easy.

QUOTE
Incorrect. Shapechange has extraordinarily delineated rules that allow you to only become one of five different animals, chosen from page 292, SR4A.


Incorrect, it has EXAMPLES of animals you can turn into. However, becasue there are, as you so eloquently put it, "Extremely Delineated Rules" describing what you can become, you have literally THOUSANDS (if not 10's of Thousands) of choices to choose from when you change forms, they are just not all provided as examples BECAUSE IT WOULD TAKE UP THOUSANDS (IF NOT 10's OF THOUSANDS) OF PAGES TO DO SO. Thus, it is left to the devices of the GM as to what EXACTLY you can take the form of, within the "Extremely Delineated Rules" you are so proud of.

Completely Different Thing entirely.
Tymeaus Jalynsfein
QUOTE (KarmaInferno @ Mar 4 2012, 11:23 AM) *
Letting the toaster be unaffected by wall voltage electricity applied to it's plug, but having it be damaged normally by electricity applied any other way, that's just straight RAW.

The rules state the spirit can operate as the item that it copies.

It does not say the spirit gets any other benefit. It cannot be disassembled for parts. It can't be used to electrocute someone by dropping it into their tub. The spirit toaster can make toast. That's it.

If I were to make up fluff on the subject, the spirit isn't copying the actual item, but the IDEA of the item. So it can do whatever the item is normally expected to do, and nothing else.

It isn't a toaster. It's a toaster-shaped spirit. It can toast. That's it.

Again, I don't see why that's complicated.


-k


Very Eloquently Put, KarmaInferno. My Feeelings Excactly, but generally expressed better than I have been doing lately. smile.gif
Yerameyahu
Sigh. The point is that you had to say 'no'. He could ask for literally a thousand different things, and the GM will have to stop and decide every time.

Shapechange proves the point either way, then. Either it's an example of a very limited, no-GM-required effect (choose a Critter from the list), or it's an example of a horrifically vague effect (choose any animal); in the latter case, the GM once again has to stop and decide every time, *then* decide on that critters exact stats, every time. If, instead, he writes down all these decisions (house rules), he is expanding the rules specifically to avoid having to adjudicate. … Which is the point. smile.gif More rules, less GM work.

I don't think the question of 'does the toaster take Stun' is relevant, except insofar as it's vague, too. You have to decide if making toast is the essence of the toaster, or if electrocuting people in tubs also is. smile.gif Can a realistic form car ram things, or can it only transport people? Someone asked if an spirit-F-15 uses jet fuel. Ad infinitum.

Again, TJ, I didn't ever claim it was a gameplay issue. You can't, therefore, rebut me by saying it's not a gameplay issue. wink.gif The fact that you personally don't care about things like pornomancer doesn't mean they can't or shouldn't be cared about. The fact that you constantly use this argument of 'you can't control everything' does not mean you're right that we shouldn't control *some* things; no one said 'everything' in the first place. No one asked for "THOUSANDS (IF NOT 10's OF THOUSANDS) OF PAGES". Can you address anything but straw men and slippery slopes?
Irion
@Yerameyahu
QUOTE
I don't think the question of 'does the toaster take Stun' is relevant

Not for a toaster, but in General. It is a huge question for possion based spirits. What happens if you posses a car. The spirt has a stun track.
If you now shoot the "possessed car" with SnS, would you force the spirit to leave?

The problem I was addressing is, that the spirit (afte the rules) would still take stun damage. (Because nothing is changing that)
So the toaster which is plugged in, will still be hurt by SnS and StunGuns. Which is quite silly.

@KarmaInferno
QUOTE
If I were to make up fluff on the subject, the spirit isn't copying the actual item, but the IDEA of the item. So it can do whatever the item is normally expected to do, and nothing else.

Can it toast beagles? My I roast something on top of it? Like a toast Hawaii?
The Problem is, it is not a "normal" toaster. You can not account for the billions of possibilities.

So you do not transform in a Toaster but in an electrical cord, are you able to drop yourself in a bathtub now?
Tymeaus Jalynsfein
QUOTE (Yerameyahu @ Mar 4 2012, 11:49 AM) *
Sigh. The point is that you had to say 'no'. He could ask for literally a thousand different things, and the GM will have to stop and decide every time.


Sigh. That is the point, it is his duty to do so. Else you would not NEED a GM.

QUOTE
Shapechange proves the point either way, then. Either it's an example of a very limited, no-GM-required effect (choose a Critter from the list), or it's an example of a horrifically vague effect (choose any animal); in the latter case, the GM once again has to stop and decide every time, *then* decide on that critters exact stats, every time. If, instead, he writes down all these decisions (house rules), he is expanding the rules specifically to avoid having to adjudicate. … Which is the point. smile.gif More rules, less GM work.


The point is that the GM is then free to put his take on things into play, a freedom he would NOT have if the rules were more codified in that regard. The framework exists, everything else should be a collaboration between GM and Players. Less Rules, and More GM/Player input on the World. The world becomes a living breathing extension of the table it is played at... smile.gif

QUOTE
I don't think the question of 'does the toaster take Stun' is relevant, except insofar as it's vague, too. You have to decide if making toast is the essence of the toaster, or if electrocuting people in tubs also is. smile.gif Can a realistic form car ram things, or can it only transport people? Someone asked if an spirit-F-15 uses jet fuel. Ad infinitum.


And again, the GM should have final say on this. BECAUSE it is allowed to be broad or narrow depending upon the Table interpretation, it is EXTREMELY Flexible. Which I believe is the point. Not every vague rule is an error on the Developer's part.

QUOTE
Again, TJ, I didn't ever claim it was a gameplay issue. You can't, therefore, rebut me by saying it's not a gameplay issue. wink.gif The fact that you personally don't care about things like pornomancer doesn't mean they can't or shouldn't be cared about. The fact that you constantly use this argument of 'you can't control everything' does not mean you're right that we shouldn't control *some* things; no one said 'everything' in the first place. No one asked for "THOUSANDS (IF NOT 10's OF THOUSANDS) OF PAGES". Can you address anything but straw men and slippery slopes?


And again, I was not just addressing you. smile.gif But here is a question for you specifically, Yerameyahu. Why should I actually care about the Pornomancer. You have yet to give me a plausible and logical reason to do so, other than THEORETICALLY it can cause an issue with gameplay. A Theory that I have YET to see actually bear non-theoretical concerns. Some things ARE Controlled, else we would not have any rules at all. So please don't imply that I am saying we should not care at all, because I do. I just do not care about the Extreme Edge Cases that are stupid and irrelevant in the game. Especially since I have yet to see any of them show up, you know, IN GAME. And even if they were to rear their ugly head, we KNOW they are Extreme Edge Cases, and thusly we say NO. Why is that such an onerous task for the GM to perform?

As for the Comment on Thousands of pages, the logical progression to eliminating any questions in game (and in this particular instance of the rules) is to actually ELIMINATE any questions in game. Which will take several more trees per book. Neither of those comments are straw men or slippery slopes, and again, you know that. smile.gif

There is a fine line between allowing interpretation and freedom of decision and reducing game play to a tedious exercise in mechanics. I think Shadowrun has it right. They provide a good framework from which you can make decisions, but you are not required to make them all the time. The more you eliminate the decision making process, the thicker the book must become. You cannot avoid that.

So, back to Realistic Form and/or Shapechange. If you want to eliminate the vagueness, you MUST delineate ALL the pareameters that can be obtained. To do so in these particular cases would indeed entail several thousand pages of additionl material to be produced. Whether you were the one who made such statements or not does not invalidate the consequence of eliminating the vagueness. I, for one, would rather have the freedom to make those choices, rather than having them made for me in a way that may not mesh with my view on the reality of the game world (and the precedence that Canon has set over the years). You may differ in that opinion. That is okay. It does not, however, invalidate my (or your) opinion. smile.gif

That said, you still have yet to tell me WHY you feel the rules would benefit from more rules delineation on this particular subject. You have yet to actually explain WHY the vagueness is not a Positive, rather than a Negative, beyond some reasoning of "a GM should not have to make those decisions." Can you provide more information than that, or does it just grate on your nerves that the GM must step in to do so?

The end point is that we disagree with each other on three points...

1. The Involovement of the GM in the establishing of precedence in game.
2. Whether or not some Vague rules are sufficient in there descriptions or not.
3. The relevance of Theorycrafting in game or out.

I don't think that you or I are ever going to come to an agreement on these topics. smile.gif
No worries, though. I do enjoy hearing your views on them. Whether or not I actually agree with them.
KarmaInferno
It is true that the rules should cover things come up in games as best as they can.

However, requiring that the rules cover EVERY LITTLE THING that might come up is an impossibility.

Otherwise you'd end up with a rulebook the size of Canada.




-k
Yerameyahu
Quite so, KarmaInferno. Which is why, if I'd seen anyone at all suggest "requiring that the rules cover EVERY LITTLE THING that might come up"… they'd be wrong. If and when that happens, I'll let TJ know. biggrin.gif

--
I didn't say you should care, TJ. I said you should admit that someone could. wink.gif

Again, you're completely lying about this 'thousands of pages'. It's not even thousands of *words*.

It's a very simple, universally-accepted principle: the rules should reduce the need for GM intervention as much as reasonably possible (as I clearly stated earlier, more than freeform and *less* than wargaming/boardgaming). That is the one and only reason RPG rules exist. And again, if the GM starts saving his decisions, he is *writing rules*. The fact that this happens proves that it would have been useful (and is, in the future) to have rules for those things.

On the contrary, I've explained repeated and specifically why unbounded vagueness is not positive, and fundamentally anti-thetical to tabletop RPG. I've also repeatedly explained that I'm *not* suggesting a gameplay issue, so I dunno why you keep claiming I am. I'm not even talking about 'extreme edge cases'; the infinite nature of the Realistic Form example means that we have literally every possible case to consider, from 0 to 'extreme edge'. smile.gif Is a toaster okay? Is a pistol okay? Is a laser rifle okay? Is a nuke okay? Is a car okay? Is a yacht okay? Is a Gundam okay? (Death Star?) Literally forever. The GM and the group have finite time.
Irion
QUOTE (KarmaInferno @ Mar 4 2012, 08:52 PM) *
It is true that the rules should cover things come up in games as best as they can.

However, requiring that the rules cover EVERY LITTLE THING that might come up is an impossibility.

Depends on the scope of the rules....
With it is only possible what is allowed in the rules, everything else functions like in the real world, you have covered a lot of ground.
You can't cover every instance explicitly, but on the other hand you do not have to.

If you streamline your rules, you can go a long way with very little pages. The problem here is, that you can't give everything a special cake.
(For exampel Magic and essence lost would need to work the same for everybody, you would need to point out what is the basis on which all characters stand. For example: Do I have to tell, that somebody is blind or do I have to write visual(normal) for him to see...)
If you stick to those "rules" you can make a rule system without leaving a lot of open question.
Tymeaus Jalynsfein
QUOTE (Yerameyahu @ Mar 4 2012, 01:20 PM) *
I didn't say you should care, TJ. I said you should admit that someone could. wink.gif


I always have, and yet, I get flak for saying I do not. smile.gif

QUOTE
Again, you're completely lying about this 'thousands of pages'. It's not even thousands of *words*.


Actually I am not, I extrapolated for ALL possible cases that COULD come up. Can you become an Insect if you have a Body of 2? Theoretically, Yes, therefore you have Millions of options right there. How about mammals? Tens of Thousands. How about Fish? How about Living Plants? How about Reptiles? How about creatures that are now extinct, but for which we have fossil records of, etc, etc, etc.? Where do you stop? If you eliminate them all, then you have a potential of tens of thousands of pages, if not more. Let us not minimize the sheer improbablility of performing this in the end. It would be daunting to even contemplate.

QUOTE
It's a very simple, universally-accepted principle: the rules should reduce the need for GM intervention as much as reasonably possible (as I clearly stated earlier, more than freeform and *less* than wargaming/boardgaming). That is the one and only reason RPG rules exist. And again, if the GM starts saving his decisions, he is *writing rules*. The fact that this happens proves that it would have been useful (and is, in the future) to have rules for those things.


And I have stated many times that Shadowrun already does this, as much as reasonably possible. What is left is purposefully left vague to allow individuality and creativity. And if the GM DOES start saving his decisions (Many of which I would NOT consider houserules, just applications of the already provided rules, extended) it is because they are HIS decisions, and they are his choices, and not someone else's. Just because it is a rule does not mean that it is a good one, or that it reflects the world as the GM sees it. Thus a more vague rule is, in some cases, more preferable than a hard and inviolable one. I have said this a few times as well. And if you argue that the rule is not inviolable and can be changed, why do you need the rule in the first place, if you are just going to change it?

QUOTE
On the contrary, I've explained repeated and specifically why unbounded vagueness is not positive, and fundamentally anti-thetical to tabletop RPG. I've also repeatedly explained that I'm *not* suggesting a gameplay issue, so I dunno why you keep claiming I am. I'm not even talking about 'extreme edge cases'; the infinite nature of the Realistic Form example means that we have literally every possible case to consider, from 0 to 'extreme edge'. smile.gif Is a toaster okay? Is a pistol okay? Is a laser rifle okay? Is a nuke okay? Is a car okay? Is a yacht okay? Is a Gundam okay? (Death Star?) Literally forever. The GM and the group have finite time.


Really you have not. You said you don't like it because it forces someone to make a calling that you do not think that they should have the need (or possibly even right; not sure, but sometimes the tone of your posts implies that, even if it is not your intent) to make. And again, if it is not a Game Play Issue, as you apparently KEEP saying, then how is it an issue at all? The fact that you brought up the Pornomancer indicated you were talking about an Extreme Edge Case, which is exactly what that is. It is an application of the rules, taken to ludicrous ends. Many (if not all) of the Theorycrafting discussions are just such situations. And because they are stupid, ludicrous, Edge Cases, they can be dismissed completely.

Yes, Realistic Form can conceivably cover anything, but I am sure that you can employ common sense and eliminate all the stupidity and silliness. I know that I can do so, and in about 1 Second. I assume you can too. Lets look at your above list: Yes (Toaster - Canon Example), Yes (Pistol - It can shoot a bullet, but it would require that it is employing a power to do so, or you LOAD it with ACTUAL AMMUNITION), Yes (Laser Rifle - Same caveat as the Pistol, allowing damage if power, or if it ties into an appropriate Power Source), No (Nuke - Stupid, Magic and Nukes do not mix), Yes (Car - Canon example of Motorcycle, and Car is easy extrapolation), Yes (Yacht - Canon Example of Ally Spirit Yacht), NO (Death Star/Gundam - Stupid and Ludicrous both), etc...

See, that was not so hard, and actually took longer to type and proof than to actually make the decision on applicability. Yes, the GM and the Group have finite time, and the problem player who tries to monopolize such time with irrelvant power gaming requests (which I would argue the player KNOWS are irrelevant power gaming requests) should be beat about the head and shoulders with the heaviest book at hand. It is not the fault of the Rules when Players get stupid and attempt to rape them mercilessly. smile.gif
Yerameyahu
I never suggested allowing Shapechange to work for any animal. I said it works for about 12. Done, fully delineated. smile.gif
QUOTE
And I have stated many times that Shadowrun already does this, as much as reasonably possible.
But that's false. There are many brief, reasonable limits that could be placed on Realistic Form. That's the whole point: you *agree* that reasonable rules should be in place; as I said, the issue for Realistic Form is that none are in place.

Because gameplay issues aren't the only possible kind of issues.

That's my point: you had to spend a certain amount of time (even 1 second) on each of those. There are an infinite number of them. They're not all obvious, irrelevant, or powergaming, either, and opinions will differ (I think a yacht is moronic, and therefore the canon is wrong wink.gif ). If there were some brief, simple lines, you wouldn't have to waste that time, or worry about ad-hoc consensus. And Realistic Form is just one example; as I mentioned, infinite Shapechange is worse, because you'd have to stat out every form.

And yes, a certain share of the blame *does* rest on the rules when they're so sloppy or vague that they encourage the players getting silly ideas. smile.gif Clearer rules can easily avoid the entire thing, without any arguments about 'the rules allow it', GM-fiat, etc.
Tymeaus Jalynsfein
QUOTE (Yerameyahu @ Mar 4 2012, 02:34 PM) *
I never suggested allowing Shapechange to work for any animal. I said it works for about 12. Done, fully delineated. smile.gif


Which is obviously false... smile.gif

QUOTE
But that's false. There are many brief, reasonable limits that could be placed on Realistic Form. That's the whole point: you *agree* that reasonable rules should be in place; as I said, the issue for Realistic Form is that none are in place.


Not false, you just do not agree. You think it should be more limited. I think the GM should be the one to place those limits, not some arbitrary developer.

QUOTE
Because gameplay issues aren't the only possible kind of issues.


They are often the only ones that matter though, since they are the only ones that actually impact gameplay.

QUOTE
That's my point: you had to spend a certain amount of time (even 1 second) on each of those. There are an infinite number of them. They're not all obvious, irrelevant, or powergaming, either, and opinions will differ (I think a yacht is moronic, and therefore the canon is wrong wink.gif ). If there were some brief, simple lines, you wouldn't have to waste that time, or worry about ad-hoc consensus. And Realistic Form is just one example; as I mentioned, infinite Shapechange is worse, because you'd have to stat out every form.


So what... That would be my job as the GM, to address such issues WHEN/IF they ever came up. I accept that. Apparently you do not. *shrug*
I do not see it as a waste of time. As for opinions of Canon, that is why some amount of vagueness is good, at least as far as the Realistic Form/Shapechange issue is concerned.. It allows you to craft your own Canon, for your own table, rather than debate whether an in-game decision by a Developer/Author is moronic or not. smile.gif

As for infinite Shapechange being worse, I disagree. At that point, you only have to stat out what the Table cares about, and ONLY when it actually comes up. You do not have to do it all, and neither did the Developers. Win-Win. smile.gif

QUOTE
And yes, a certain share of the blame *does* rest on the rules when they're so sloppy or vague that they encourage the players getting silly ideas. smile.gif Clearer rules can easily avoid the entire thing, without any arguments about 'the rules allow it', GM-fiat, etc.


Except that you will never have rules so clear that a player cannot create insane Edge Cases becasue he got a silly idea. I have yet to see a game that could not be abused. Generally because players are not happy unless they are a unique snowflake of some kind, or they purposefully look to exploit and break the game because they consider it to be fun.

AS for Shadowrun, I do not see it ENCOURAGING Edge Cases.

No worries though. Been an interesting conversation. smile.gif
Irian
QUOTE (Tymeaus Jalynsfein @ Mar 4 2012, 10:51 PM) *
I think the GM should be the one to place those limits, not some arbitrary developer.


In this case, what do you need rules for at all? For combat, it would be enough to say "Guns often kill people" and let the gm decide if in THIS case, the gun does that. As a gm, I've got enough to do with the story and I don't want to spend my time limiting the things that are allowed by the rules, when it would be much easier when it would already have been limited by them.
Yerameyahu
QUOTE
Except that you will never have rules so clear that a player cannot create insane Edge Cases becasue he got a silly idea.
It's like you're incapable of not jumping to the extreme. My point is that clear-*er* rules tend to avoid such instances. I never said 'rules can avoid them totally', or should, nor that the solution is infinitely clear rules.

I don't even see how anyone could disagree. smile.gif We're playing a rules-based tabletop RPG, so we all necessarily agree that moderate (not minimal, not maximal) rules guidance is a good thing. We can differ a little about how much, but the point is that some things, e.g. Realistic Form, have much less than the normal, standard amount of guidance. Again: the GM shouldn't do *nothing*, but he shouldn't do *everything* either. Realistic Form, just for example, requires that he do everything. This is why we have chargen rules, and Avail rules, and combat resolution rules, and on, and on. The GM could do all of that.
Tymeaus Jalynsfein
QUOTE (Yerameyahu @ Mar 4 2012, 03:08 PM) *
It's like you're incapable of not jumping to the extreme. My point is that clear-*er* rules tend to avoid such instances. I never said 'rules can avoid them totally', or should, nor that the solution is infinitely clear rules.

I don't even see how anyone could disagree. smile.gif We're playing a rules-based tabletop RPG, so we all necessarily agree that moderate (not minimal, not maximal) rules guidance is a good thing. We can differ a little about how much, but the point is that some things, e.g. Realistic Form, have much less than the normal, standard amount of guidance. Again: the GM shouldn't do *nothing*, but he shouldn't do *everything* either. Realistic Form, just for example, requires that he do everything. This is why we have chargen rules, and Avail rules, and combat resolution rules, and on, and on. The GM could do all of that.


But it is to the Extremes that you keep going. It was not I that brought up the Pornomancer. It was not I who said it was problematic for the GM to adjudicate Realistic Form. It is not I that leans to Theorycrafting the Ludicrous just to prove that it is indeed ludicrous, even if it is possible. smile.gif

Maybe that is why you fail to comprehend what I am saying. smile.gif The issue is that I already believe that the Shadowrun Rules provide Moderate (read enough) guidance to solve issues as they come up (Not too much and not too little). I don't need rules to tell me what animal forms I can allow in the game. I don't need them to limit what Realistic Forms my Spirits can take. Furthermore Realistic Form does not require that the GM do Everything. I tend to place a large onus on the players to provide ideas and options to me (as do the other GM's). I (We) approve them or disprove them, and discuss what compromises both sides are willing to make. See, this allows everyone to have an actual impact on the game without feeling restrained and powerless. And it allows the game to take on a life at the table, because EVERYONE is invested in furthering the game, not just the GM. Try it sometime, you may find that you like it. smile.gif

And claiming that the GM is responsible for Everything in SR4 is very disengenuous. He isn't. If you had your way, he would do even less. I personally think the balance is pretty good.
Yerameyahu
Of the half dozen examples and analogies I attempted on you, the pornomancer was one. If you'd read, you'd have seen that was (and is) an example of a rules issue that could exist, even if it never happened in your games. It doesn't indicate that all rules issues are extreme.

It is problematic for the GM to adjudicate Realistic Form; that was me who said it. smile.gif

The process of approval, discussion, and investment you describe is just as easily called 'fighting and wasting time'. biggrin.gif It just depends. But that's beside the point, because I'm positive that you use the book rules for all the other things I already mentioned (twice), if only as a basis for house rule adjustments. You don't just wing everything. That's the point: nothing I'm suggesting changes that, neither causing freeform nor boardgaming. I never said a word about not allowing GM/player collaboration, or removing the role of the GM (on the contrary, I repeatedly stipulated the opposite).

I also *didn't* claim the GM is responsible for everything! Why can't you ever read anything I write? nyahnyah.gif I said the amount of GM intervention required by Realistic Form, which is very vague, is higher than the standard, normal amount of GM intervention required by other aspects of SR4; there aren't even *rough* limits on Realistic Form. Having some in no way removes the role of the GM, player input, etc. It's very simple: you're fine with rules for guns, vehicles, combat, etc.… but suddenly any rules for Realistic Form is a travesty?
Tymeaus Jalynsfein
QUOTE (Yerameyahu @ Mar 4 2012, 06:50 PM) *
Of the half dozen examples and analogies I attempted on you, the pornomancer was one. If you'd read, you'd have seen that was (and is) an example of a rules issue that could exist, even if it never happened in your games. It doesn't indicate that all rules issues are extreme.

It is problematic for the GM to adjudicate Realistic Form; that was me who said it. smile.gif

The process of approval, discussion, and investment you describe is just as easily called 'fighting and wasting time'. biggrin.gif It just depends. But that's beside the point, because I'm positive that you use the book rules for all the other things I already mentioned (twice), if only as a basis for house rule adjustments. You don't just wing everything. That's the point: nothing I'm suggesting changes that, neither causing freeform nor boardgaming. I never said a word about not allowing GM/player collaboration, or removing the role of the GM (on the contrary, I repeatedly stipulated the opposite).

I also *didn't* claim the GM is responsible for everything! Why can't you ever read anything I write? nyahnyah.gif I said the amount of GM intervention required by Realistic Form, which is very vague, is higher than the standard, normal amount of GM intervention required by other aspects of SR4; there aren't even *rough* limits on Realistic Form. Having some in no way removes the role of the GM, player input, etc. It's very simple: you're fine with rules for guns, vehicles, combat, etc.… but suddenly any rules for Realistic Form is a travesty?


And I agreed that it COULD exist. And then dismissed it as irrelevant, because it would never see the light of day at any table I played at. Therefore, the possibility of such a character (the Pornomancer) causing ANY issues is a moot point. smile.gif

As for what you said and did not say... Ummmm, Really? This is a direct quote from you from about 3 posts up (Post 46). I read it word for word twice to make sure I understood EXACTLY what you were saying. smile.gif

QUOTE (Yerameyahu)
Realistic Form, just for example, requires that he do everything.


As for approval, discussion, investment. It happens outside of the game, usually, precisely so no time is wasted in game. There is this handy thing called email that works wonders for such things. smile.gif

Yep, I (we) use the book rules for almost everything (weven for things that I do not like the wya they are handled, it is just not that importrant to me). There are only a few rules that have been changed (some to optional Rules from the books, and some because our GM wanted to try some other options he came up with). And again, Yes, Realistic Form, requires a few seconds more to adjudicate. Again... SO WHAT. Is that few seconds really that problematic for you? And Realistic Form is Vague because it needs to be. And no, Having a rule for Realistic Form is not a Travesty (It already exists). Claiming that more specific ones are needed is the travesty, as I truly see no real need for such rules... smile.gif

No worries, Yerameyahu, we are just going in circles again. You don't really need to invest any more time and energy into the discussion. I think we mostly understand each other. smile.gif
Yerameyahu
The GM has to do everything… for Realistic Form. Not "everything in SR4". smile.gif I guess you should have read me that 3rd time!

So, we agree: Realistic Form is more vague and requires more GM work than the standard in SR4. And yes, that is problematic for me. There could easily be brief rules to limit Realistic Form from 'infinity' down to 'normal flexibility'. So… we're back at the beginning: it's not a problem *at your table*, because nothing is.
The Jake
QUOTE (Irion @ Mar 4 2012, 02:40 PM) *
@The Jake
It is a power for free spirits. So every free spirit type could do it.
The problem is not really the toaster, but if you let it fly, where does it end?

The question is, does the spirit need the attributes to bull of this stunt?
For example: A spirit transforms into an F-15.
Can he fly? How fast can he go? Can he use jet fuel?

If you allow it, there is no limitation on what could be done.


Movement for spirits is already well covered.

But I see your argument, but I mean there's a number of issues with 'Realistic Form'. The fact you want to be an F-15 at F1 force is only one issue.

Take Invoking where the form gets larger, gaining a +1 reach. How does this work if its a metahuman form (e.g. dwarf) and you don't *want* to get larger? My understanding is that they are man sized normally but can only 'grow' when Invoking is used (so in the preceding example, spirit gets larger regardless if it screws up the 'Realistic' aspect of his form).

The mechanics for Realistic Form are horrible. They need to be completely redefined by RAW otherwise they're impossible for a GM to deal with without a good amount of handwavium and houseruling. I can live with it but I can definitely see why it chafes others.

- J.

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