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    Scenes within Scenes

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Game Gab
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    • RozR
      Roz @Faraday
      last edited by

      @Faraday said in Scenes within Scenes:

      @Pavel said in Scenes within Scenes:

      Because one can interact with people outside of their little group, should they choose.

      Theoretically I guess, but in my experience this almost never happens. (see the comments above regarding interruptions, being yelled at for spam, etc.)

      The only poses I ever saw going to the main room were the static announcements or the “oops I forgot to use tt command” nonsense.

      But to each their own.

      raises hand i saw it happen a lot on places like arx. depending on the event, it would be a mix of posing to the room and posing to tabletalk, people would pose indicators of reactions that would be notable enough for others in the scene to see, move between different tabletalk areas, react to something happening outside of tabletalk, etc. these weren’t rarities, they were things i’d see at nearly every event scene of any size.

      she/her | playlist

      PavelP 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 5
      • PavelP
        Pavel @Roz
        last edited by

        @Roz I fear any time we speak of generalities in MUing we’re going to have to have “Except on Arx” as a meme—like Crash Course World History’s near-infamous Except The Mongols crash-cut (as they are the exception to so many of history’s expectations).

        He/Him. Opinions and views are solely my own unless specifically stated otherwise.
        BE AN ADULT

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • saoS
          sao
          last edited by

          I definitely had some very cool interactions at those giant Arx scenes where a lot of the RP was in tabletalk and then we interacted with what was going on in the wider scene. Not just on Arx either. And one time at a hatching an impression from the stands that wasn’t me but was very cool to interact with that would have been impossible without the places.

          Or like-- party scenes where stuff from flows smoothly from tabletalk in and out, can totally happen. I can remember a couple of cool things like this from olden times. It just requires people not to be assholes.

          let it be a challenge to you

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 5
          • R
            real_mirage @Wuff
            last edited by

            @Wuff

            Why even play on a game with a large player base that is suppose to interact with each other then? I have always enjoyed large scenes because I believe it makes the world feel more alive. Even if its a scene I have nothing to do in, getting 20/30/40+ people together, online, all at once, is cool. Tables and places can make that more manageable, but I think the chaos of a large scene is part of the charm.

            KDraygoK 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • RozR
              Roz
              last edited by

              making giant scenes OOCly mandatory — and saying that your character is shirking on their IC duty if you’re not at the scene — is indeed bad game policy. i understand that this was more common back in the day in certain areas of the hobby.

              but i do think that it’s not strictly relevant to the more fundamental question of how tabletalk is and can be used. it’s a bad policy that games shouldn’t have, not something that’s inherent to all large scenes as a rule.

              she/her | playlist

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              • KDraygoK
                KDraygo @real_mirage
                last edited by

                @real_mirage said in Scenes within Scenes:

                @Wuff

                Why even play on a game with a large player base that is suppose to interact with each other then? I have always enjoyed large scenes because I believe it makes the world feel more alive. Even if its a scene I have nothing to do in, getting 20/30/40+ people together, online, all at once, is cool. Tables and places can make that more manageable, but I think the chaos of a large scene is part of the charm.

                A game with a large player base I don’t mind, that provides a much wider variety of opportunities for RP. A large number of people in one scene? Definitely not for me for a number of reasons.

                1. Pacing. The larger the scene, the slower the pacing and it’s a domino effect. If you want to interact with everyone, you will need to wait for a number of poses before being able to respond, including a GM emit if it’s an event. So if someone has to take a little more time to think of how to react and the next person has to do the same, the pacing can grind to a very slow pace. Which can result to a scene going 5+ hours to get through enough pose rounds for something substantial to be accomplished without feeling rushed.

                2. Easier for people to get lost in the mix, harder to feel like you are contribute meaningfully, more challenging for those that do not naturally have a louder voice to be heard.

                3. For me, large scenes are much more mentally taxing to keep track of what is going on with everyone and being constantly worried that you missed something someone else did that was crucial. You also hate to feel like you left someone out by accident and they take it as a slight.

                4. Brain melting. Some people are great at large scenes and running events, personally it can be a challenge for me. It is also faster to drain the mental stamina as well which can be a shame because I want to try to stay sharp enough to continue to contribute.

                On table and place posing, I know that it would probably make it harder on Ares in terms of posting the log. Maybe a table doesn’t want their part of the log posted, but I believe in Ares, everything is posted. Which is why it has a pseudo place code where it’s just normal posing, with a header of where that person is situated in the code.

                RozR FaradayF 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • RozR
                  Roz @KDraygo
                  last edited by

                  @KDraygo said in Scenes within Scenes:

                  On table and place posing, I know that it would probably make it harder on Ares in terms of posting the log. Maybe a table doesn’t want their part of the log posted, but I believe in Ares, everything is posted. Which is why it has a pseudo place code where it’s just normal posing, with a header of where that person is situated in the code.

                  i mean, in a hypothetical world where there was a tabletalk system on a game that kept it quiet during the scene for spam reasons, but then posted everything into the final log — which is actually an idea i was muddling over with friends earlier today — then it doesn’t matter if a table does or doesn’t want to have their tabletalk posted; if that’s how the system worked, that’s how it would work, and people would be forewarned and they’d adjust to the code or bail.

                  she/her | playlist

                  PavelP 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • FaradayF
                    Faraday @KDraygo
                    last edited by

                    @KDraygo said in Scenes within Scenes:

                    On table and place posing, I know that it would probably make it harder on Ares in terms of posting the log. Maybe a table doesn’t want their part of the log posted, but I believe in Ares, everything is posted. Which is why it has a pseudo place code where it’s just normal posing, with a header of where that person is situated in the code.

                    Ares doesn’t suppress table talk. It just identifies which poses are happening in which places. It would be difficult to suppress table talk on the web portal because you could potentially be controlling multiple alts and/or NPCs simultaneously from the same window. Also Ares’ scene system fundamentally doesn’t modify / customize the pose output per player. Anyone subscribed to the scene sees the same thing. You’d have to make significant structural changes to the scene system to support old-school table talk. And since I hate it, I have no intention of ever doing so.

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                    • PavelP
                      Pavel @Roz
                      last edited by

                      @Roz One could hypothetically have all the tabletalk ‘scenes’ logged and filed as sub-scenes under/linked to the main scene. Though I imagine it’d be a bit of a bugger figuring out what the tabletalk scenes are reacting to… but I’ll leave that to the people who read logs for fun.

                      He/Him. Opinions and views are solely my own unless specifically stated otherwise.
                      BE AN ADULT

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                      • H
                        howyadoin @Roadspike
                        last edited by howyadoin

                        @Roadspike said in Scenes within Scenes:

                        If there’s “important shit” going on that the peanut gallery can’t interrupt? Don’t have the peanut gallery at the scene. Have them in their own side-scene, either happening at the same time as the “important shit” scene that they can watch freely, or RPed after the "important shit* scene but ICly taking place at the same time.

                        I can’t think of anything more annoying than reading a scene in one window and then flicking to another window to react to it in a separate scene. I also don’t see how this isn’t a “coded solution” to a social problem.

                        Plus, not everyone uses the web portal, so this two-scenes at once isn’t a great solution.

                        We just want to react to a scene in real-time. The way we might do - you know - if we were at a real event, sitting at our own group table in a real event setting?

                        Yeah - it takes some code to make that happen. It’s more realistic. A lot more realistic and less of a pain than trying to schedule a whole other scene where we have to read the log from the first scene and then react to the log while pretending we’re there. And it cuts down on a lot of spam for others who wouldn’t ICly be interested or able to hear what’s going on.

                        If it’s a one-way scene that again, can’t be interrupted? Don’t make it a scene! I’m sure we’ve all been in plenty of scenes where we thought, “This didn’t need to be a scene, it could’ve been a post/vignette/scene-set.” So don’t make them scenes. Have the GM post up their too-important-to-be-interrupted scene as a Vignette, and then have the actual scene be everyone’s reaction to it afterwards. You know, when people can actually interact with each other without interrupting.

                        99% of what is being talked about are player-run parties, ceremonies, sermons, etc. Not GM-run scenes or plot-important settings. Just RP events where the entire point is for people to gather.

                        One stand-out example were these dinners someone on Arx would put on that were blind-folded dinner dates with strangers. There would be hostess emits of the waiters, etc. and what was going on in the environment, and then with some exceptions we would primarily tabletalk with the blind dates we were paired up with.

                        Your solution for such an event would be a vignette written by the hostess, who would have to private message every attendee who they are supposed to sit with, and then like 10 individually scheduled one-on-one scenes tying into that. Sounds really exhausting.

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