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Author Topic: Realism Pt. III  (Read 1227 times)

RPGPundit

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Realism Pt. III
« on: September 23, 2006, 03:43:52 PM »
Perhaps I was a bit hyperbolic in my last post about this, but I stick by the essence of my argument with a slight modification:  It seems that in RPGs, either the "realists" are very poor game designers, or the medium of RPGs itself cannot convey the "real" very well.
 
First of all, no RPG is meant to be a pure simulation. Its meant in its first function to be a game. This is why, shockingly, the best designer of vehicle rules for an rpg is NOT an aerospace engineer. The aerospace engineer might know more about vehicles than anyone else on earth, but in reality the best writer for vehicle rules would be a GOOD GAME DESIGNER.
 
And also shockingly, "experts" in their given subject are often too obsessed with said subject to maintain perspective as to what makes good game design.  That is to say, if he is an expert in computer hacking, he is likely to make "computer hacking rules" so fucking complex that players will have to spend twenty-five minutes and read seven distinct tables of results to complete the action for "my pc turns on his computer".
 
Now, that means that generally speaking, the concept of game playabilty trumps "realism" every time, EVEN among fans of realistic rpgs.  And I stick to my guns in saying that most people who claim they want "realism" in their RPGs REALLY MEAN that what they want is complex rules that are internally consistent and playable, that help them visualize or compliment their experience of the game, and only then within the specific paramaters of what interests them.

That's the other thing. People who want what they call "realism" are usually only interested in certain facets of their game being "real".  No one who plays RPGs wants absolute realism. They might want enough rules on vehicle construction and combat to fit an entire 200-page manual, but they sure as hell don't want a 200 page manual of complex rules on cooking or going to the bathroom.
 
Which gets back to simulation.  Most RPGs are emulations. I don't disagree with that at all, on the contrary, I think there's no such thing as an RPG that isn't an emulation.  The thing is, almost every rpg is either an emulation of a literary or fantasy genre (fantasy in the sense of an unreal psychological fantasy, not swords&sorcery type fantasy); NOT an emulation of actual reality.  So even in an RPG like Shadowrun, you want combat rules to be "simulations" of what you think of in your head when you think "cool cyberbunk battles with high-tech guns blazing all over the place", not what would be a real firefight.

Even in historical setting RPGs, the most arguably "realistic" of all, you are still looking for emulation of a fantasy, not emulation of historical fact. You are looking, when you run a campaign based entirely on the historical Roman Empire, to do "I Claudius" with scheming senatorial politics, or legionaires conquering Gaul; not to be a Roman peasant dying at 28 from dysentery.
 
So even games where the emphasis APPEARS to be on realism is really only looking to be an accurate simulation of CERTAIN memes that make the particular fantasy emulation you want to achieve work.  You might want really detailed "realistic" information on psychology and mental illness if you're running Call of Cthulhu; whereas if you're running a game set in the wild west you probably only need a moderately detailed set of rules for psychology, if any.   So what you're talking about is DETAIL, not realism.
 
In fact, this is often one of the things that fucks up RPGs, either on the level of the system itself or on how people run it.  If you are doing an RPG about post-apocalyptic road warriors a lá Mad Max, you probably WANT to have really detailed vehicle combat rules.  On the other hand, if you're doing an rpg about a modern-day occult conspiracy, having 200 pages of vehicle design&combat rules will probably get in the way, be a needless waste of space, and kill your game's "feel" if you try to actually implement those rules.
 
Even in situations where it might be appropriate to have detail, you don't want "realism" that kills the fun. I remember with no fondness whatsoever my first and only experience of "actual play" with Rolemaster. It was a game of "Spacemaster" (I think that's what the sci-fi rolemaster rules were called?) with a DM who was a great believer in the "realism" of the rolemaster system and an absolute stickler to those rules. We spent nearly two hours making characters for the game, started out on a spaceship going to some planet. The DM made a bunch of rolls cross-referencing the near-endless book of tables, informed us that the starship we were in hit a meteor, and we all died. End of game.
 
Was it realistic? I'm not sure.  Was it complex? Very.  Did it totally suck donkey balls? Yes.
 
On the other hand, nothing would fuck up a game about futuristic Giant Robot pilots than having a one-die-roll resolution system for all Mecha piloting and combat. If you have dedicated as many pages to swordfights and swordfighting maneuvers as you have to gunfights in your wild west game, you better have a damn good reason for doing so. In other words, the areas of simulation you choose to apply a lot of detail to are the areas that the game is expected to emphasize in play.
 
Again, Shadowrun contains an excellent example of this.  Why are Riggers important in the world of Shadowrun? Because there are sophisticated rules dedicated to Rigging. If Shadowrun had never had sophisticated rules on Rigging, it could still have existed as a game, you just wouldn't have anyone playing Riggers and it would be assumed that vehicle piloting was not an important aspect of the Shadowrun setting/game.

What you choose to make detailed in an RPG determines what will be important in that RPG.
 
So there is NO RPG out there that attempts to be truely "realistic" or a real "simulation" of real life.  "REALITY: The RPG" would in fact be a gigantic manual with thousands of pages where the rules were EQUALLY SOPHISTICATED for every aspect of your PC's existence, from reading a book to going to the bathroom to cooking noodles, to driving a car, to getting in a knifefight. That would be "realism". That would also be boring and unplayable as all fuck.
 
Fortunately, no one really wants that. What one wants is DETAIL, where and when detail is appropriate. It makes sense that most RPGs dedicate one or more entire chapters to combat, while dedicating no more than a few lines if any to cooking.  Because most people want to play a game where there will be a genuine expectation of conflict, but not a genuine expectation of an Iron Chef competition in every adventure.  If someone wanted to make "Iron Chef: The Cookery" RPG, then you would expect that RPG to have an entire chapter or more dedicated to cooking, and only a couple of lines if any dedicated to combat rules.

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flyingmice

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Realism Pt. III
« Reply #1 on: September 23, 2006, 04:27:32 PM »
I agree with this post 100%, and I almost never agree with anything 100%

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Realism Pt. III
« Reply #2 on: September 23, 2006, 05:24:30 PM »
Quote from: flyingmice
I agree with this post 100%, and I almost never agree with anything 100%

-clash

Yeah, it's wierd. Normally I can't stand when *anyone* defines *anything* as non-existent, and go all devil's advocate. But this post goes as far as defining what realism is before saying that there isn't any. And even then goes on to redifine what is usually called realism and state that the latter does exist... A sound tactic. I can't say I find anything as being specifically wrong.

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Realism Pt. III
« Reply #3 on: September 23, 2006, 08:20:39 PM »
Well, I see something I want to take issue with. Two things, in fact.

While many or even most people are talking about detail when they say "realism", I'm not. When I say realism, I mean accuracy and consistency at the level of abstraction chosen for the game or mechanic.

E.g., even if my character's a merchant, I may not really care about the details of a running a business. I'm happy with an economic subsystem that just gives me a few very broad options and outputs a few key variables (like profits) based on a single die roll. But I will be annoyed at the lack of "realism" (consistency and accuracy) if the subsystem routinely works out to either guarantee doubling your assets every few months, or makes trade so unprofitable or risky that a low-level Gambling skill provides a better rate of return (and lower volatility of capital). The subsystem simply can't produce effects that are consistent with an accurate picture of, say, early-modern European society. It's clearly not designed to function at all as an emulation of an actual option for the PC; at best it's a patch to let the GM roll on a table and give PC's the appearance of interacting with the wider society. But the rule doesn't conform at all with reasonable expectations and doesn't contribute to an intuitive understanding of the game world.

I also think there's something that isn't quite right about this
Quote
What you choose to make detailed in an RPG determines what will be important in that RPG.
Think about it. If it were true, then D&D would be all about fighting. Yet I hear all the time about people who play games of political intrigue, romance or whatever with D&D. What's going on in those cases? I think that there's something about RPGs which actually allows the importance of rules vs. not-rules to be inverted at times. Once the rules are fully internalized, players can begin to build on them in ways that result in the rules' exerting "influence at a distance", like the game with detailed, deadly gun rules that almost never sees a gunfight precisely because everyone understands the implications. (Balbinus mentioned a game like this in his "running a game without combat" thread, if I recall correctly.)

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Realism Pt. III
« Reply #4 on: September 24, 2006, 03:53:34 AM »
You're right, it should be "helps to determine": in particular in the positive sense, that having rules about something in a game will tend to make that something significant in a game; but the absence of rules doesn't by any means signify that the "something" in question can't be focused on.

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jhkim

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Realism Pt. III
« Reply #5 on: September 25, 2006, 01:13:27 AM »
Quote from: RPGPundit
Perhaps I was a bit hyperbolic in my last post about this, but I stick by the essence of my argument with a slight modification:  It seems that in RPGs, either the "realists" are very poor game designers, or the medium of RPGs itself cannot convey the "real" very well.

Quote from: RPGPundit
So there is NO RPG out there that attempts to be truely "realistic" or a real "simulation" of real life. "REALITY: The RPG" would in fact be a gigantic manual with thousands of pages where the rules were EQUALLY SOPHISTICATED for every aspect of your PC's existence, from reading a book to going to the bathroom to cooking noodles, to driving a car, to getting in a knifefight. That would be "realism". That would also be boring and unplayable as all fuck.


Sigh.  This is just setting the goalposts at a ridiculous point again.  You're trying to define that "realistic" means that everything has to be perfectly detailed to every last bit.  Thus, your argument shows that no book can possibly be realistic -- because a realistic book would detail every trip to the bathroom and every motion in cooking noodles, and thus be completely unreadable.  Similarly, no film, or painting, or anything else can be realistic.  Even the wargames which are used to train naval cadets that are actually researched by the military are not realistic, because they have no "going to the bathroom" rules either.

Clearly, the medium of books just cannot convey the "real" very well -- nor can film, or wargames, or anything else.  Unless you can offer different criteria, then this definition of "realistic" is worthless because it means that nothing is ever realistic.

Kyle Aaron

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Realism Pt. III
« Reply #6 on: September 25, 2006, 01:32:33 AM »
Quote from: jhkim
Unless you can offer different criteria, then this definition of "realistic" is worthless because it means that nothing is ever realistic.


But d00d, if I don't get to redefine words to mean whatever I want, how the fuck can I win every argument? I mean, it works for the Forgers, yeah?
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arminius

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Realism Pt. III
« Reply #7 on: September 25, 2006, 01:35:27 AM »
( In reply to jhkim.)

Yeah, that's my point above. It's a common issue in wargames when the detail is too far below the level of command (e.g., resolving movement and combat for individual soldiers in a game where the total forces that a player is responsible for would be the equivalent of a company or a battalion). Small errors at the lowest level of detail are easily compounded into severe distortions at the overall level of the game.

Problems of this sort may be amenable to fine-tuning but it's easier on bothe designer and the player to just pick an appropriate level of abstraction, not to mention that it's truer to the perspective of the person whose shoes the player fills, as it were.

For example in the case of the merchant character I mentioned above, I'd far rather have a subsystem that got the generalities of running a business right, than one that contained a mass of bean counting detail which, in the aggregate, yielded completely incorrect results.