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#61 | |
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Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Spain —Europe
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So, if it's a positive or negative trait, even an advantage or a disadvantage... that should be left entirely in hands of the GM/players' assumptions & campaign setting, as so many things. Overally speaking, I think "Broad-minded" makes more sense being classified as a Quirk, not a Perk nor an Advantage, because that keeps the trait in a more or less indeterminate status. The value or "Broad-Minded" is too variable and relative.
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"Let's face it: for some people, roleplaying is a serious challenge, a life-or-death struggle." J. M. Caparula/Scott Haring "Physics is basic but inessential." Wolfgang Smith My G+ Last edited by demonsbane; 10-06-2009 at 10:01 AM. Reason: grammar |
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#62 | |
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Banned
Join Date: Apr 2008
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#63 | ||
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Banned
Join Date: Apr 2008
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#64 | |
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Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Eindhoven, the Netherlands
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Some perks offer you no benefit other than a guarantee of certain things from the GM. Some quirks offer no penalty other than a guarantee of certain things from a player. If you qualify one as mechanical, I think you should qualify the other as mechanical. EDIT: For an on-topic example, you cannot take Broad-Minded as a quirk, and then suspiciously regard anyone who is stranger than you. You don't have to walk over and cheerfully offer them your throat (that's Xenophilia), but you should role-play a general acceptance and lack of discrimination. |
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#65 |
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Join Date: Aug 2004
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Compare with the quirk "Really likes vegetables."
While the argument could be made that, since vegetables are good for you, this is actually a benefit. Also, since your parents want you to eat your vegetables, they will like you more, so it is a benefit. However, it is a quirk because it _limits choice_ on your part. The GM can rely, at least a little bit, on the notion that you will tend to choose vegetables over non-vegetables. And the GM and other players can rely on the notion that you will tend to roleplay a fondness for vegetables, which will hopefully add to everyone's roleplaying experience at the table. You get a point in exchange for this. To prevent abuse, you are only allowed to get up to 5 points for a collection of these. Even "Really likes healing, and goes out of the way to heal injuries" is a quirk. Because it means you will tend to get healed _even when it might be better to wait for healing._ |
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#66 |
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Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Harrisonburg VA
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Being "broad-minded" should be thought of as being a contrasting trait to "narrow minded".
Obviously, being narrow minded means that your character suffers from ideological blind spots-- these can be religious, atheistic, left wing, or right wing. It is a positive thing for a character to not be required to make knee-jerk responses when faced with certain stereotypical situations. If you wanted to accentuate the negative aspects of broad mindedness, you would paint it as an inability to embrace an objectively true principle regardless of the evidence. Such a person (if he's wrong) is set to become a statistic or a character in a morality tale. Socially speaking, a broad minded person is not going to have an easy time becoming very far advanced in a specific religion, political group, or "cryptic alliance." Group leaders will not trust him and he may even be shunned if he fails to fast-talk his way out of situations where his lack of ideological purity becomes evident. Socrates was broad minded, for example... and it became quite dangerous for him, indeed. Of course, he took it to at least the level of a -10 point Odious Personal Habit. |
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#67 | ||
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Join Date: Jul 2008
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If Broad-Minded guarantees the player will behave a particular way in every instance of a given situation, I'm not seeing how. It demands nothing more specific than a general policy of tolerance, as far as I see. Well, it would be kind of disturbing if you thought you were misunderstanding... Am I missing something that makes this informative?
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I don't know any 3e, so there is no chance that I am talking about 3e rules by accident. |
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#68 |
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Banned
Join Date: Apr 2008
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#69 | |
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Banned
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Portland, Oregon
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And to address your second point: well, not if the entire group has Broad-Minded :-D. Seriously speaking however, I can see the benefits of having a leader with the Quirk. Especially if they deal in trade agreements. |
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#70 | |||
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Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Harrisonburg VA
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Broad-minded is usually a tag taken to mean that the person if willing to discuss, experiment with, or tolerate whatever is currently being objected to by "old fashioned" folks. Being broad minded will endear you to the "fringe" and hurt you with the "establishment". Being chauvinistic (to whatever degree) will do the reverse. Quote:
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Most people think of themselves as broadminded and see it in a positive way. I was simply pointing out the aspects of it that you could "hook" into in order to play up the more negative aspects of it. |
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