Monad wrote:What rules defend robbers?
It's not that rules defend robbers, it's just SOME robbers (and also victims) scrutinise rules to the unthinkable.
There are several things that can be done in these cases, but in any of the situations, something has to be done. By not taking action over some situations where one of the involved parties wins over a grey area situation, we are telling them they can proceed the same way next time.
I don't know how GMs sort it but you can easily spot recurring situations by having some notes in their forums, regarding certain situations that, by interpreting the rules, can lead to abuse.
A few suggestions:
- each GM shouldn't take care of all complaints that show up daily, and repetitive abuse situations should involve at least another GM.
- adding to the PVP section a clear sentence saying "Victims are encouraged to engage roleplay with red characters" and "If you choose to run with or without roleplay, they have the right to kill you". Many people go in panic mode when a red character appears and choose either option A: they don't speak; option B: they run.
- adding to the looting section if killing steeds is legal or not (you can always argue that it was to check for loot, it makes pets go to the sky, broken obsidians (either partially or even destroyed) and grief because that player only had that one steed/cannot prove the steed got broken forever.
- the asshole rule should have severe punishments so as not to encourage this kind of behaviour.
Gms try to have as little involvement in gameplay as possible and hope players will take matters on their own hands either through RP or hunting players down etc, but sometimes an action from GMs is needed to limit where the okay stops and the bullshit starts.
It's not punishment enough to change someone's gameplay. The aim is to make it such a pain in the ass that people have no choice but to join KoT. (...) Pain is temporary, gear is forever.
Taking Monad's example: I don't go to Toyota to have the salesman point a gun to my head for me to buy a Ford, I find a way not to go meet that salesman and buy the Toyota I wanted.