In A Wicked Age question

  • 2 Replies
  • 4786 Views
In A Wicked Age question
« on: December 20, 2011, 06:50:38 AM »
In a game I ran this weekend we had a situation come up that I wasn't sure about.

The player character, a murderous inkeeper wanted a magic amulet that he could use to change his wife back to her true form.

The wife, an NPC who had been twisted by sorcery into a flesh eating hag wanted to hold onto and destroy the amulet as she believed it was innately evil.

So the amulet was there.  I described the hag wife grabbing it.  The player said that he also wanted to grab it so we had a conflict.

We played out the conflict and the player beat me.  I said that I'd have my character keep hold of the amulet but I'd happily take damage.  I wanted to see if the guy would continue to beat his decrepit wife.

He wanted the amulet more than he wanted to harm his wretched spouse but that's what he got because I'm a mean GM.



We thought about the situation again.  If he'd described his character getting the amulet first and I'd been to one to object and challenge it then the conflict would have ended with him holding the amulet.

Maybe during the conflict he could have described his advantage dice as having seized the amulet but still being accosted.  I perhaps didn't let him.  My answers to his moves, even when I was losing, were described with the amulet staying with me but the advantage coming from some other source, such as position or pain.

My question is whether I can use my answer, even when losing, to describe the advantage of the winner?

Or is this mechanical encouragement to push the players into action to describe their characters taking an action before another player does?

*

noclue

  • 609
Re: In A Wicked Age question
« Reply #1 on: December 21, 2011, 04:43:03 PM »
My question is whether I can use my answer, even when losing, to describe the advantage of the winner?

Not sure if I understand the question, but in your answer you are free to concede all sorts of fictional things as having occurred while still preserving the conflict. So, I'd say yes, you can describe in your answer how the advantage doesn't shift to you.
James R.

    "There is a principle which is a bar against all information, which is proof against all arguments and which can not fail to keep a man in everlasting ignorance-that principle is contempt prior to investigation."
     --HERBERT SPENCER

Re: In A Wicked Age question
« Reply #2 on: February 28, 2012, 01:38:38 AM »
Quick question:  Where you describing what happened because you were the GM, or because you lost the initiative (i.e. you were the answerer)?
My real name is Timo