I’m sure it’s pedantic, but I’m having a great time thinking about whether player-added rules/homebrew/traditions counts as layer 3, or a secret layer 4.
DnD homebrew rules are an obvious example. but other things too, just how people interact with the game and add their own flavor. when my friends and I play Sushi Go we have added the ti…
I’m sure it’s pedantic, but I’m having a great time thinking about whether player-added rules/homebrew/traditions counts as layer 3, or a secret layer 4.
DnD homebrew rules are an obvious example. but other things too, just how people interact with the game and add their own flavor. when my friends and I play Sushi Go we have added the titles of “maki king”, “prince of pud”, and “pud serf” (for who has most and least puddings)
My first instinct is to call it Layer 3, as it's optional and doesn't interrupt gameplay. But then after some thought, homebrew rules may not be skipped as they are rules of the game... even if that rule is gaining a fancy title. So I'm going to land thinking those would actually be Layer 2 elements.
I’m sure it’s pedantic, but I’m having a great time thinking about whether player-added rules/homebrew/traditions counts as layer 3, or a secret layer 4.
DnD homebrew rules are an obvious example. but other things too, just how people interact with the game and add their own flavor. when my friends and I play Sushi Go we have added the titles of “maki king”, “prince of pud”, and “pud serf” (for who has most and least puddings)
Love this idea. Pedantic is my middle name. :)
My first instinct is to call it Layer 3, as it's optional and doesn't interrupt gameplay. But then after some thought, homebrew rules may not be skipped as they are rules of the game... even if that rule is gaining a fancy title. So I'm going to land thinking those would actually be Layer 2 elements.