... now with 35% more arrogance!

Friday, September 2, 2011

Where and How to Search

The Mike Mearls article on players vs. characters, and the Critical Hits response reminded me that one of the complaints I've heard about the player skill approach is that there are no guidelines for the GM or the players on how searching needs to be described, and in how much detail. The accusation, from those who prefer the character ability approach, is that player skill leads to "pixel-bitching", essentially a game of "guess what the GM is thinking".

The golden rule of "don't make dick rulings" helps a bit. Don't make any risky decisions on behalf of players and don't rule out the obvious unless it's risky. However, if this guideline doesn't feel specific enough, here's another guideline: when a player says "I search the room" and the GM asks "how?", what the GM really wants to know is:
  • Where do the characters look?
  • What sense(s) are being used? (sight, sound, touch, odor, taste)
  • What are the characters doing that might improve (or reduce!) the chances of finding anything?
Nothing else is really needed, so the players should feel safe in assuming that the GM will screw them out of the obvious, or punish them by deliberately interpreting their description stupidly.

If you're the GM, interpret "where" as liberally as possible: "I search the walls and floor" means all parts of the floor, even behind the statue where a switch is located, unless they can't search behind the statue without doing something else first, like moving the statue (in which case, tell them this! "You can't search the walls and floor behind or under the statue unless you move it. Do you want to try?") or unless there's an obvious risk (in which case, tell them this! "You can't search the walls and floor behind the statue unless you jump over the pit that surrounds the statue. Do you want to try?")

If the players are vague about how they search, ask them specifically "What senses are you using? Are you just looking, or are you feeling with your hands, or what?" Also ask how close they get and how they move.

"I look at the floor carefully without entering the room" is very safe, but can miss small things far from the doorway, as well as sections of the floor under or behind objects.

"I look at the floor carefully, cautiously moving forward when it looks safe, examining every section closely" can be a little risky, but should be much less risky than walking into the room after a casual visual search from the doorway.

"I feel the floor with my hands, crawling slowly across every section closely" can be even riskier (Contact poison! Vulnerable!) but catches a lot of details a visual search will miss, because it involves another sense (touch) and getting very close.

"I look at the floor carefully, tapping the section immediately in front of me with a pole and listening to the sound as I cautiously move forward" is much less risky and catches even more details because it involves a third sense (hearing,) but the character will miss some tactile details because of the indirect contact.

Adding another method like "I hold a torch close to the surface" or "I rub away any dust on the stones" can reveal more detail or introduce new risks. Any search method will have benefits and drawbacks, the broadest ones being risk vs. time spent.

However, the GM should never be a stickler about the precise verbal phrasing, only the precise conceptual phrasing. "Walls and floor" means "all the walls, and the entire floor," even if the player doesn't use the word "all"; it doesn't mean "on top of the tall cabinet", unless the player says "and on top of the cabinet". Nor should the GM read too much into fine distinctions between words; using the word "glance" instead of "look" or "scan" shouldn't matter. If a person could see a detail and they are close enough and have enough light to see the detail, they should see the detail.

So: players, focus on explaining where you search, with what sense, and what you're doing that you think should help the search, and you should be good in games run by fair GMs. And GMs, only punish or withhold information based on where the characters search, with what senses, and what they specifically do, and plan tricks, traps, and secrets with those three questions in mind.

3 comments:

  1. Nice advice, and it fits well with the more detailed stuff on Hack & Slash's trick series.

    ReplyDelete
  2. There's a few game playing problems with the detailed descriptive search (which I still really prefer for some perverse reason).

    1. They take forever. Do we really need a half hour of play to confirm the empty room is an empty room?

    2. Becasue they take forever or players are afraid they'll miss something the players will inevitably come up with a list of standard procedures.
    Which will be boring and the players will eventually try to pass onto the DM as his responsibility to keep track of leading to:
    "Oh no I wouldn't have fallen in that pit trap behind the door we are deploying search pattern 12 and in subsection g it states I'd be standing 4 feet to the left"
    or
    "Well yeah that's standard search procedure 14f but I wouldn't do that here..."

    Players have to not be dicks to the DM too.

    ReplyDelete
  3. @JD: I don't know that detailed player skill searches take forever, or at least I don't think they *should*. That's kind of my point: when I see the debate about player skill searching vs. character ability searching pop up, the examples are always of the "pixel bitching" variety, with really precise search descriptions. I think if the GM emphasizes to the players "all I want to know is where you are searching -- no 'everywhere' allowed -- and which methods you are using, including any tricks you think will improve your odds of finding stuff or avoiding risks." The search descriptions can wind up reasonably short, if you follow that guideline.

    I think that also helps with the "standard procedures" part, too, although as you say, you still have to remind players "don't be a dick" if they step over that boundary. I don't approve of standing orders, myself, although if they want to work out a particular procedure and give it a code name, like "the savage sweep", I'm fine with them saying "we do the Savage Sweep on the room". Kind of makes sense in character, even.

    ReplyDelete