While I personally tend towards the subtle, I wouldn't have registered here if I wasn't willing to put up with the heat in the kitchen, so to speak. And tgdmb *is* pretty well-known for being a seat of innovation in TTRPG circles, primarily thanks to Frank and a couple of migrants from the old-school wizards.com CharOp boards (where I used to post under a different, but similar, name).fbmf wrote:(A) People I had never heard of and who don't regularly post here knew the culture of tgdmb well enough to comment intelligently on it. I had no idea we were so well known in the gaming community, and
(B) They seemed to speak of said reputation as if it were a good thing. For the record, to the best of my knowledge they had no idea I was the admin or even a regular poster until the conversation was over.
I very much appreciate your response, and if I didn't want honest feedback, I wouldn't bother asking for it. More to the point here, though, I'm cognizant enough to understand that feedback is probably going to be delivered in tgdmb's particular idiom, and I'm not terribly likely to be offended by that.fbmf wrote: [The Great Fence Builder Speaks]
Anyhow, I agree with Prak that as long as you don't start spam advertising us, asking for criticism of your system is not a problem at all.
Be forewarned: No regular poster will think twice before telling you what they think of your system and how it reflects on you personally.
[/TGFBS]
echo