this post was submitted on 29 Jun 2023
14 points (93.8% liked)
RPG
3928 readers
1 users here now
Discussion of table top roleplaying games.
founded 4 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
It depends on several things.
First, how do you treat your game nights? Do you treat them as a casual social gathering where it's ok to show up fashionably late; or to not show up without warning; or to drop out last minute because of whatever non-emergency reason? If so, don't be surprised players also treat it as something casual and social, and reading rules isn't casual or social. Maybe D&D just is too complex and not the right game for your table if you just want to run a casual social event.
Personally I treat my D&D style campaign game nights similar to how I'd treat coaching a sports club. If you want to be a striker on a soccer team, and you don't understand the off-side rules and don't want to learn them, no coach in their right mind wil put you on the field either. Sure I give my players time to learn, and don't expect them to know everything from day 1, but the absolute minimum I expect is a willingness to improve.
Practically, what I do for each player in my campaign is to compile a document which I expect them to focus on. They roll up a fighter, I will include the fighter class entry plus common special maneuver. They roll up a wizard, I will include the wizard class entry plus their spell book. They roll up a merchant (which I consider the most complicated class in my game and will discourage inexperienced players from taking it), I will give them the class entry plus a 101 intro to the economics of my campaign world. They have 3 months (approximate 10-15 weekly sessions) to understand the material I've given them, before I start reconsidering their presence in my campaign. Obviously there's some flexibility, it's not a life or death matter; but again I do expect at least some sign of willingness.
Next, please do understand I did specify campaign game nights above. Obviously things are different with one-shots like convention games or open table games at the local game store. I don't expect the players to know any rules there and will happily guide them by the hand from start to finish.
I like your soccer analogy. The question is:
Both are perfectly valid uses for a soccer ball but if the expectations don't align you gonna get problems.