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IntCon vs GM Oomph?!

Started by Christoffer Lernö, November 26, 2002, 05:03:26 PM

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Christoffer Lernö

I'll cut to the chase: I recently heard the opinion that IntCon meant zero GM Oomph.

I was further told that in addition to the types I already thought of as railroading, the three following types are also railroading:
    * With Gamemaster oomph, Overt, Flexible, Consensual
    * With Gamemaster oomph, Covert, not Flexible, Consensual
    * With Gamemaster oomph, Covert, Flexible, Non-Consensual[/list:u]
    To me these definitions feel highly unorthodox, to say the least. But I might have misunderstood everything from the start.

    Comments anyone? Is this what IntCon and Railroading really means or is my doubts of the orthodoxy of these interpretations shared by others?
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Le Joueur

Quote from: Pale FireI'll cut to the chase: I recently heard the opinion that IntCon meant zero GM Oomph.
Yeah, I can be a real ass sometimes.

In essence, I was arguing that since nothing in Intuitive Continuity predicates a story, created by whoever, that (barring Illusionist play) it was most like 'pinball Simulationism' in that it didn't include Gamemaster Oomph in its explanation (for or against it).  Illusionism is now defined by the presence of Gamemaster Oomph (and Covertness), thus I suggested that these two styles aren't the same.

Illusionism isn't Intuitive Continuity and Intuitive Continuity isn't Illusionism.  I'd be happy to engage in discussion about whether the two are relevant to each other, but I'm pretty sure one is not completely bounded within the other.

Quote from: Pale FireI was further told that, in addition to the types I already thought of as railroading, the three following types are also railroading:[list=a][*]With Gamemaster oomph, Overt, Flexible, Consensual
[*]With Gamemaster oomph, Covert, not Flexible, Consensual
[*]With Gamemaster oomph, Covert, Flexible, Non-Consensual[/list:o]To me these definitions feel highly unorthodox, to say the least. But I might have misunderstood everything from the start.
This set of choices stems from the realization that Gamemaster Oomph sounds exactly like what we were blindly flailing at way back in Is 'Railroading' a Useful Term.

It seems that Gamemaster Oomph is 'railroading without the stigma,' because in 'a,' it is railroading simply by someone else controlling your character, taking you 'where they want to go,' right down the railroad.  More so with 'b' because, whether you know it or not, you go where the gamemaster takes you, inflexibly.  Ron has indicates 'c' is also once 'outed,' "When...the social contract...is broken regarding this issue [Consensual], then we're into railroading."

Christoffer does me a disservice when he doesn't include his counter argument that all four are necessary; railroading is 'with Gamemaster Oomph, Overt, not Flexible, and Non-Consensual.'  I might entertain that you need three of four or only one, but this all or nothing approach seemed wrong.

Quote from: Pale FireComments anyone? Is this what IntCon and Railroading really means or is my doubts of the orthodoxy of these interpretations shared by others?
Personally, I don't see how Intuitive Continuity couldn't be used for a 'pinball Simulationist' game, therefore where is the need for Gamemaster Oomph?  Illusionism is defined as requiring that.  Like I said, there is possibly some overlap, but one simply isn't the same as the other.

Fang Langford
Fang Langford is the creator of Scattershot presents: Universe 6 - The World of the Modern Fantastic.  Please stop by and help!

Seth L. Blumberg

My understanding of "pinball Sim" is that the term refers to play in which events in the game world march on even when the players aren't looking at them, and the players can interact with as few or as many pieces of the world as they choose. That's not IntCon.
the gamer formerly known as Metal Fatigue

Le Joueur

Quote from: Seth L. BlumbergMy understanding of "pinball Sim" is that the term refers to play in which events in the game world march on even when the players aren't looking at them, and the players can interact with as few or as many pieces of the world as they choose. That's not IntCon.
Are you saying that you can't support a "pinball Simulationist" game with Intuitive Continuity?  I was under the impression that it was the other way around, that the world was static, like a pinball machine, and the players just bounced around however they liked uncontrolably; "Exploration of Setting" style.  Granted that the gamemaster hasn't prepared much (I don't see preparation in the description of "pinball Simulationism"), why couldn't Intuitive Continuity be the method employed?

Referee?  Can we get a definition of "pinball Simulationism?"

Fang Langford
Fang Langford is the creator of Scattershot presents: Universe 6 - The World of the Modern Fantastic.  Please stop by and help!

Walt Freitag

The way I see it, you can use reality-in-flux techniques to do pinball sim or to do intCon, but you can't be doing both at once.

The whole point of pinball sim is that the world is indifferent to the player-characters. It reacts to them through physical causality and through NPC behavior, but it doesn't react to anything metagame, such as the players' interests or desires. IntCon is exactly to the contrary. The world not only gets invented on the fly, it gets shaped to better fit what the players want to accomplish or get involved in story-wise.

Upon learning that the player-characters are desperately in need of dilithium crystals and are changing course to visit the planet Beta Gemini Prime to search for them, knowing that no details of the planet have been invented yet, true pinball sim would require the GM to follow the same procedures for deciding whether or not the planet has dilithium crystals that he would have followed if the players weren't looking for them. An intCon GM would likely decide that there were dilithium crystals there, but that they were jealously guarded as sacred relics by green-skinned babes who worship a cranky ancient computer.

Bottom line is, reality-in-flux without GM-oomph is one way (not the only way) to do pinball sim. (And is not Illusionism because of the lack of GM-oomph.) Reality-in-flux with GM-oomph is intCon. (And is probably Illusionism, unless the process of making GM decisions about the world-in-flux is somehow made overt.)

- Walt
Wandering in the diasporosphere

Mike Holmes

Walt has it.

Pinball Sim is:

No Force (GM Oomph)

and

Inflexible

I don't see the overt/covert, or consensual/non-consensual refering to any sort of non-Forceful play. Sure you could hide that you aren't controling things, but why would you? And being Overt, the objection would be instant: "Why aren't you manipulating things behind the scenes to make a better game!"  ;-)

There's lots of room for talk of non-Forceful styles. But IntCon is not one of them. If the players are not manipulating things to create story (Narrativism) and the GM is not (Illusionism), then getting a story from this would be "The Impossible Thing".

I think Skarka clearly means to imply the use of Illusionist endloading techniques, just like Walt implies.

Mike

P.S. Before I come under assault from the "Terminology Police" can we get a better term for this sort of play? I only put it out there as part of an analogy (that of the players being sentient balls in a pinball machine). Can we call it Objective Play? Or something like that?
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Le Joueur

Quote from: wfreitagThe way I see it, you can use reality-in-flux techniques to do pinball sim or to do intCon, but you can't be doing both at once.

The whole point of pinball sim is that the world is indifferent to the player-characters. It reacts to them through physical causality and through NPC behavior, but it doesn't react to anything metagame, such as the players' interests or desires. IntCon is exactly to the contrary. The world not only gets invented on the fly, it gets shaped to better fit what the players want to accomplish or get involved in story-wise.

...Bottom line is, reality-in-flux without GM-oomph is one way (not the only way) to do pinball sim. (And is not Illusionism because of the lack of GM-oomph.) Reality-in-flux with GM-oomph is intCon. (And is probably Illusionism, unless the process of making GM decisions about the world-in-flux is somehow made overt.)
Okay, I guess I'm the one who is confused.  I was under the impression that Reality-in-Flux was about making up detail to meet a number of needs, but specifically not because of 'what was already there.'

Let me see if I understand what you're saying; the whole point of Intuitive Continuity is that the world is 'cares about' the player-characters. It reacts to anything meta-game, such as the players' interests or desires, but it doesn't react to them through physical causality and through NPC behavior.  The game evolves to suit what the players are doing.  I've got that.

What I don't get is, where Reality-in-Flux comes into "pinball Simulationism."  Seth indicated that the world existed when the players weren't looking in "pinball Simulationism."  Isn't that the opposite of Reality-in-Flux?  Don't get me wrong, I was pretty sure until today, that you could do "pinball Simulationism" with Reality-in-Flux.

For those of you who haven't taken scrupulous notes, Mike gave us the term "pinball Simulationism."
Quote from: Orignally Mike HolmesIn pinball Sim, the GM has no particular plot, and may only have the sort of elements you see Ron suggest for Narrativist play. That is, you may have lots of NPCs, and Relationship Maps of a sort, and preset Bangs, but you have no idea how the story will go. The difference between Sim and Narr in this case is that there is no particular Premise being addressed, the players are simply enjoined to play their characters, as they encounter the world and the elements that the GM has prepared.

The reason that pinball is a good name is because play sort of then resembles playing pinball. The ball starts rolling, and nobody is quite sure where it's going to go. Like pinball, you can use your flippers and bump the machine a bit, which is like the player interaction, and the GM's additions, but in the end much of what happens is essentially random. The objective in this case is just to explore the included elements, and to observe the "series of interesting events" (or non-story) that may occur.
Seems to me this is what Illusionism is usually bent to emulate anyway.  The problem is I don't see how adding Gamemaster Oomph to Reality-in-Flux inherently makes it into Intuitive Continuity.

I really need a better description of Intuitive Continuity then yours (above) or Ron's "in which the GM uses the players’ interests and actions during initial play to construct the crises and actual content of later play. (This is a form of 'winging it' that may or may not become Roads to Rome.)"  Because I just don't see any Gamemaster Oomph in that.  I mean wouldn't using Gamemaster Oomph to "use players' interests, actions, or desires" be redundant?  ("Yer gonna get want you want, whether you want it or not!")

If anything, that suggests that the addition of Gamemaster Oomph to Reality-in-Flux would automatically turn it into Illusionism (unless the gamemaster is doing this Overtly).

I keep zeroing in on Intuitive Continuity 'caring about' the players' choices and Gamemaster Oomph being about being able to void them; these seem opposed to me.  How can you use players' interests and actions and void them occasionally; where does the priority ultimately lie?  What I don't buy is Ron's introduction of "during initial play."  All of the passages I've seen from Gareth-Michael Skarka indicate that at no time will the gamemaster stop 'using player interests and actions.'  Yours are the same.

Another question I have is, where did Reality-in-Flux come up?  I mean RiF not withstanding, all of what I have suggested is still the result of clear ratiocination.

I guess I'm trying to track down which reference I have wrong.  Because if you're using consistent "player's interests," I don't see any Gamemaster Oomph.  If there's no Gamemaster Oomph, I don't see Illusionism; if anything, I see potentially "pinball Simulationism."  (Certainly a lot of Simulationism can be had in the absence of Gamemaster Oomph, but I'm trying to stay with what has been presented.)

Let me simplify so I can understand it tomorrow when I read over it again:
    [*]"Pinball Simulationism" has no Gamemaster Oomph because it lets players do whatever.
    [*]Intuitive Continuity has no Gamemaster Oomph because it prioritizes whatever the players find interesting (over the long term).
    [*]Illusionism has Gamemaster Oomph, plain and simple (and that's a priority) with a side order of Covertness or it's Participationism.
    [*]If you use Covert techniques in Intuitive Continuity, you can emulate "pinball Simulationism."
    [*]Illusionism can also use Covert techniques to emulate "pinball Simulationism."
    [*]Reality-in-Flux is a Covert technique.
      [*]With Gamemaster Oomph, it is a tool for Illusionism.
      [*]Without Gamemaster Oomph, it is a tool for...Intuitive Continuity?
      [*]You're saying that RiF without Gamemaster Oomph supports "pinball Simulationism;" is that right?
        Therefore if RiF uses Gamemaster Oomph, it supports
      Intuitive Continuity?[/list:u]That doesn't seem right, shouldn't it support Illusionism instead?[/list:u][*]I still don't understand how there is Gamemaster Oomph in Intuitive Continuity, do I?[/list:u]Fang Langford
      Fang Langford is the creator of Scattershot presents: Universe 6 - The World of the Modern Fantastic.  Please stop by and help!

      Le Joueur

      Quote from: Mike HolmesThere's lots of room for talk of non-Forceful styles. But IntCon is not one of them. If the players are not manipulating things to create story (Narrativism) and the GM is not (Illusionism), then getting a story from this would be "The Impossible Thing".

      I think Skarka clearly means to imply the use of Illusionist endloading techniques, just like Walt implies.
      Okay, I think we're getting some where into this thick skull of mine.  Could someone please show me a reference where 'you get story' from Intuitive Continuity?  That's what I need to see (I don't have more than fragments of Skarka's).  I'm sure that'll clear up quite a bit for me.  I never thought of 'player Force' in this application before.

      Please?  Pretty please?  With sugar on top?

      Fang Langford

      p. s. I cross-posted my last with Mike's.
      Fang Langford is the creator of Scattershot presents: Universe 6 - The World of the Modern Fantastic.  Please stop by and help!

      Walt Freitag

      Sorry, Fang. I don't think I can help you clear this up.

      The problem is that there is, as I see it, a clear and simple answer to "Intuitive Continuity has no Gamemaster Oomph because it prioritizes whatever the players find interesting (over the long term)." Which is that it's still the GM using the interstices of the reality-in-flux to create the story (that is, create narrative qualities in the outcome), which is where the GM-oomph comes in. The players affect the outcome and also express their preferences for how the story should proceed (that is, what they find interesting) through the medium of their characters' actions.

      Unfortunately, that's impossible.

      So to hell with it.

      - Walt
      Wandering in the diasporosphere

      Christoffer Lernö

      Here is Skarka's column I quoted from by the way Fang.

      The relevant part comes as he is discussing types of guilds. For Divination he makes a detour to explain IntCon:

      Quote from: Gareth-Michael SkarkaDivination is always a touchy subject in a roleplaying game, where future events are determined by a combination of player action and gamemaster planning. So, this type of magic would result in a Conductor having to give some details of future events (how much they give away would be a result of two things--one, how successful the reading was, and two, how much the event depends upon the actions of the players). IntConning is a useful skill for Conductors to learn here. Briefly: IntCon is short for INTuitive CONtinuity--the practice of coming up with last- minute plot devices or events that look as if they were intended all along!  There will be a discussion of IntConning in the Conductor's section of the UnderWorld rulebook, since it is a valuable skill that in my opinion too many games overlook. With an IntConned game, instead of a gamemaster coming up with a plot and running a group of players like lab rats from plot point to plot point, the gamemaster comes up with a brief outline, which he then alters in reaction to what the players do. (I know, this may not make much sense here--I'll cover it in more depth later).  This can apply to divination as follows: if the character performing the divination succeeds, the Conductor comes up with a "future prediction", based somewhat on his or her notes of where the story is going, but largely out of thin air. Keeping this in mind, it then becomes the Conductors job to drop in little bits of plot that lead up to the event, making it seem as though it was pre-destined (but without railroading the players--this is the most important part. NEVER railroad the players into a pre-determined plot).
      [edit: Added the relevant quote so you don't need to click the link]
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      Le Joueur

      Hey Christoffer,

      Quote from: Pale FireThis the relevant part which comes as he is discussing types of guilds. For Divination he makes a detour to explain IntCon [Trimmed by me]:
      Quote from: Gareth-Michael SkarkaBriefly: IntCon is short for INTuitive CONtinuity--the practice of coming up with last-minute plot devices or events that look as if they were intended all along! ...With an IntConned game, instead of a gamemaster coming up with a plot and running a group of players like lab rats from plot point to plot point, the gamemaster comes up with a brief outline, which he then alters in reaction to what the players do.... (but without railroading the players--this is the most important part. NEVER railroad the players into a pre-determined plot).
      I'll add:
      Quote from: Gareth-Michael SkarkaIntuitive Continuity...the development of your own Story Arcs with little or no prior planning.  The planting of plot elements throughout the campaign that, in retrospect, will appear to make a unified whole...and yet began as mere improvisation on the part of the Conductor. There will be rules mechanics to assist this process.
      Thanks for providing this, finally.  Reading through it, it still supports the idea that Intuitive Continuity is improvisation based on player input.  I have to guess that Mike is right, after all.

      Quote from: Mike HolmesI think Skarka clearly means to imply the use of Illusionist end-loading techniques, just like Walt implies.
      Skarka implies that he 'sows good seeds' and then 'reaps the results,' definitely retcon.  Back to Christoffer's initial question, that would mean there isn't any Gamemaster Oomph, no Force, no assumption of control over the player characters, just retconned plot elements becoming a story after the fact (or more likely, shortly before the end of the fact).

      I disagree that he's using Illusionism in the new sense.  When he's "planting elements throughout the campaign," I don't think that has anything to do with taking over control over the player characters, now the definition of Gamemaster Oomph (or Force) which is required of Illusionism.  Retconning is very much what he's doing, but now not enough to rate being Illusionism alone.  Does this herald the return of the term Dramatism?  (Most often defined as retconning the game into story.)

      I guess we're pretty much to the end of Christoffer's topic (unless he'd like redirect).  It still leaves me wondering what the relationship is between Force, Gamemaster Oomph, or taking control of the player characters, and railroading legitimized....

      Fang Langford
      Fang Langford is the creator of Scattershot presents: Universe 6 - The World of the Modern Fantastic.  Please stop by and help!

      Christoffer Lernö

      Quote from: Le JoueurI disagree that he's using Illusionism in the new sense.  When he's "planting elements throughout the campaign," I don't think that has anything to do with taking over control over the player characters, now the definition of Gamemaster Oomph (or Force) which is required of Illusionism.  Retconning is very much what he's doing, but now not enough to rate being Illusionism alone.  Does this herald the return of the term Dramatism?  (Most often defined as retconning the game into story.)
      Fang, you're definately reading something other into "GM Oomph" than I am.

      What I think you're doing is saying that GM Oomph equals "the extent GM takes control of the game and drives the events". That's not what I'm reading into it at all.

      I feel that mayb what you're reading as GM Oomph is what Ron labels "GM impact" here:

      Quote from: Ron Edwards3) I think that "GM impact" is too generic a way to look at my #1; in the later parts of my post, when I say "GM impact," I'm referring to the specific kind of impact listed in my description of variable #1 - which is to say, the actual GM- influence (control) over the player-character's important decisions.
      Maybe Ron could give us his thoughts?
      formerly Pale Fire
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      Le Joueur

      Quote from: Pale Fire
      Quote from: Le JoueurI disagree that he's using Illusionism in the new sense.  When he's "planting elements throughout the campaign," I don't think that has anything to do with taking over control over the player characters, now the definition of Gamemaster Oomph (or Force) which is required of Illusionism.  Retconning is very much what he's doing, but now not enough to rate being Illusionism alone.  Does this herald the return of the term Dramatism?  (Most often defined as retconning the game into story.)
      Fang, you're definately reading something other into "GM Oomph" than I am.

      What I think you're doing is saying that GM Oomph equals "the extent GM takes control of the game and drives the events". That's not what I'm reading into it at all.
      I think not, reread what I emboldened.  Saying that it is only as far as the 'story impacting decisions' in a method of gaming that only deals in 'story impact' is redundant.  I'm not going to explain it again.

      Fang Langford
      Fang Langford is the creator of Scattershot presents: Universe 6 - The World of the Modern Fantastic.  Please stop by and help!

      Christoffer Lernö

      When was GM Oomph defined as taking over control of the player characters? There is a difference between being able to take control and doing it all of the time. Maybe it's my poor english, but "taking over" sounds an awfully lot like you are thinking about the latter only.

      My impression of GM Oomph is that is defines the extent to which the GM is able to override game and player decisions. It doesn't say anything about how often this is done, or to what purpose the override is used.
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      Le Joueur

      Quote from: Pale FireWhen was GM Oomph defined as taking over control of the player characters? There is a difference between being able to take control and doing it all of the time....
      Which is trivial at best compared to not allowing it at all.

      Follow, being able to override a player at any time means the players are never safe in their decisions (whether they know it or not) and play is profoundly affected by that possibility.  'How often' or 'how much' isn't even important when it can happen at any time; this is probably even more obvious when you consider how different it is when this tradition is broken and no gamemaster override is allowed.  (Basically, games have quibbled over 'how much' for so long that few realize the vast differences between this and not at all.)

      Conversely, if there is no possibility of player-override whatsoever, it is radically different.  Thus a graph like this:
        Never <---a---> Any Time <---b---> All the Time[/list:u]Now where would one divide two significantly different types of games, 'a' or 'b?'  It should be obvious to all reading that I consider games on the right of 'b' to be virtually non-existent.  Thus 'a' is the only worthwhile divider and I think it an obviously profound one.

      Quote from: Pale FireMy impression of GM Oomph is that [it] defines the extent to which the GM is able to override game and player decisions.  It doesn't say anything about how often this is done, or to what purpose the override is used.
      Here is how Ron defined Gamemaster Oomph, "how much influence the GM has influence over story-impacting decisions made by the player-characters."  Clearly, either the gamemaster has some or he has doesn't.  I say that however you look at it the 'a' division is the only major distinction; simply giving the gamemaster 'the keys' means nothing in the 'kingdom' is ever safe.

      I know we've got over twenty-five years of games that give this ability to the gamemaster without question and without thinking, but that's no call to ignore the left side of 'a' or the profound difference it offers.  And just to be clear, I'm saying the difference between 'none at all' and 'some of the time' is so profound it dwarfs 'how often' and 'how much' to little more than trivialities.

      Nit-picking over 'how often,' 'to what degree,' or 'in what fashion,' is something designers have been doing for decades, and for what?  Rarely (until recently) do you see them 'take a step back' and realize that there is another possibility, one whose differences are obvious and profound.  Certainly, 'zero tolerance' of gamemaster Oomph is a hard to aspire to for a traditional-bound bunch like us, but doing so changes a lot of assumptions many designer don't realize they have.  To me, that is the real difference between Gamemaster Oomph or not.

      My impression is that you can't imagine a game without some degree of Gamemaster Oomph.  In my eyes, that leaves you thinking that ultimately all gaming is Illusionism to some degree and that some games are simply 'more honest' about it.

      To which I say rubbish.

      Fang Langford

      p. s. For the record, there are huge differences between "overriding the game" and "overriding the player."  If you can't differentiate between those, the above is probably pointless.
      Fang Langford is the creator of Scattershot presents: Universe 6 - The World of the Modern Fantastic.  Please stop by and help!