Atgxtg Posted September 15, 2014 Share Posted September 15, 2014 ATG, the fact that players are scared by the (potential) effects of failure makes failure meaningful "Meaningful" may mean many things. Only when a failure is boring does it become "not meaningful". Yes, and that is why there are times when it makes sense to make rolls when failure would not be "meaningful". Using the example given for the lock and the guards - if the GM doesn't have the player roll, then the players realize that the the result of the roll isn't important. Quote Chaos stalks my world, but she's a big girl and can take of herself. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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