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[Misery Bubblegum] Opinion and Truth

Started by TonyLB, September 26, 2005, 11:34:07 AM

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TonyLB

I sum up my concern in the Hogwarts 90210 Actual Play thread.  Super-executive summary:  It's more fun for someone to have an opinion ("Sydney's a double agent") than for them to share in public knowledge ("Of course she's a double agent.  We all knew that.")

Right now, Misery Bubblegum's Opinion mechanic works like this:

  • When people roll their dice, some of those dice end up in their "Opinion Pool."  They can't spend their own color dice from their Opinion pool.  The only thing (initially) that they can do is to give it away, or offer it as a bribe to another player.  It's personalized Fan Mail, with some teeth for bribing folks:  "You get this die from me if your character doesn't say another word before walking out the door."
  • So, because people can give their dice to your Opinion pool, you'll have dice from different people (tracked by distinctive colors) all mixed up in your pool.  You can't spend yours, but you can spend theirs.  You can either (a) spend them to give yourself an advantage (yay!), just like you'd spend your own dice or (b) give them straight back to the player they belong to (and into the pool they can spend from), in order to form an Opinion about that player's character.
  • More dice can be given back (same as above) to make the Opinion stronger, both narratively ("I'm absolutely certain!") and mechanically ("This lets you reroll three points worth of dice, not just one!")
    [li]Once you've formed an Opinion about someone you can use it to reroll dice in conflicts (to your advantage, against them, etc.).  They can also use it to reroll dice, but only by giving you another die from their Opinion pool.  So the more they play to the Opinion, the more power they give you to form important Opinions about them.  You want to pick Opinions that they're interested in exploring, so as to get the best return from your investment.

So, here it is in hypotheical action:
Quote
Corwin shows up at Flora's house.  He has amnesia, not that he's letting on about that, but he does.  He gives Flora some of his dice, because he wants to get them back into pools that he can roll from.

Flora forms opinion:  "Corwin wants the throne."  Corwin gets some dice back.  He is happy to play to that opinion, so he spends more dice using it to manipulate events.

Flora follows up with "Corwin is machiavellian and self-serving."  Corwin goes "eh."

A new player, Random, enters the mix.  He's a lot of fun, so Corwin gives him some dice.  Random forms the surprising (given the circumstances) opinion "Corwin can be a decent guy when he wants to."  Corwin finds himself intrigued.  He spends more dice.  Random increases that opinion.  Randoms sway over Corwin increases, Flora's sway over him lessens.

Unfortunately, the reward mechanic for this is messed up.  It encourages people (strongly!) to narrate their Opinion into Truth.  If Corwin is, objectively, trying to sieze the throne then Flora's sway over him should (by current mechanics) be growing constantly as he uses the opinion she formed of him.  And, particularly for people who are comfortable with Director Stance, narrating opinion into truth is very easy.  The Hogwarts 90210 thread showed exactly how that leads to a truncation of the fun of opinion.

In the actual Nine Princes in Amber, characters are shuffled straight off stage, never to appear again, when their opinions are confirmed.  Flora opines "He's going for the throne," there is a brief period of indecision, and then when he decides to go for the throne, she's out of the story.  Random opines "He can be a decent guy," there is a much longer period of indecision, lots of combats, and much doubt about whether Random is right.  But then when Corwin tries to be a decent guy when he doesn't have to, Random is shuffled off screen, and only appears in half a page of the rest of the book.

Being provably right (or wrong) is boring narrative.  The system needs to be modified so that it isn't mechanically attractive.

My first thought is that once an opinion becomes commonly accepted (i.e. "truth" whether it's objectively true or not) the mechanical opinion is gone.  However much it let you influence events when the question was in doubt, it's worthless now.  I think that, on its own, would be a reward structure that would encourage people to never resolve such issues.  Never seems to strong.  So, a counter-balancing factor ...

The counter-balance is that, in order to establish something as consensus truth, a player (or group of players) need to somehow "buy out" all of the opinions that would be invalidated under the mechanics.  This can be a nice, hefty lump-sum payment.  If the opinion is no longer generating much in the way of income then the player might well welcome being bought out (so that they can reinvest those resources in opinions with more growth potential).  But if the opinion is still hot and controversial, they will avoid being bought out as much as they can.  Indeed, both sides (the person holding the opinion and the person to whom it pertains) will be rewarded for keeping things uncertain so that the opinion can grow and flourish for as long as it's interesting.

Is this how you would approach the problem?  Or would you go about it some different way?  What happens if somebody doesn't have the resources to buy out all of the opinions on the table?  Does that mean that the matter can never be resolved?  Or does it mean that they need to do it piece-meal:  You can't just say "Cordelia is evil!" you have to have a scene where Angel informs Gunn, then a scene where they two of them inform Fred and Wesley, then a scene where everyone gangs up and tries to buy out Connor's "Cordelia is perfect" opinion?

And, also, what about opinions that are about to be proven false?  Can someone decline the offer to buy out, and keep their opinion even though it flies in the face of what everybody now knows?  That would be cool.  "By Jove, the earth is flat, and some day I'll PROVE IT!"
Just published: Capes
New Project:  Misery Bubblegum

LordSmerf

You touched on this briefly in your Actual Play post, but it seems to me that the danger of changing something from Opinion to Truth is that the conflict that was being driven by the Opinion will be resolved and may not be replaced with a new Conflict.  There's a risk of, at least a temporary, ratchetting down of tension in play.

Now, that's not actually necessarily a bad thing.  It may be good to have a bit of breathing space where you resolve something and then take some time to reconstruct the next conflict.  If that's something you want to pursue, then the buy-out options sounds great.  The buy-out dumpts tension in a massive resolution and provides everyone with resources to begin building a new conflict, but that's going to take some time.

If, on the other hand, you don't want that period of relaxation (well, relative relaxation, I'm sure there'll be other Opinions fighting it out out there) then it seems as if some other mechanic is called for.

I also think the idea of holding a clearly wrong opinion is kind of neat, but I would almost think it would have to be treated some other way mechanically.  A sort of denial of established truth seems like it could be kind of cool...

Thomas
Current projects: Caper, Trust and Betrayal, The Suburban Crucible

Doug Ruff

Quote from: TonyLB on September 26, 2005, 11:34:07 AM
And, also, what about opinions that are about to be proven false?  Can someone decline the offer to buy out, and keep their opinion even though it flies in the face of what everybody now knows?  That would be cool.  "By Jove, the earth is flat, and some day I'll PROVE IT!"

It's not just cool, for some types of plot, it's mechanically necessary (for example: "I will be the prom queen/lead quarterback/graduate college - even though everyone else thinks I'm ugly/fat/stupid.")

I'm a bit behind on the rules for this game, but isn't it still the case that something can be 'proven' and then disproven later? That the difference between an Opinion and the Truth is the difference between only a few people (or one person) having an opinion, and nearly everyone having the same opinion.

I don't know if I've said this before, but: your game needs this murky relativism, for gameplay and dramatic purposes. (Besides, Newtonian physics were the truth, until people like Einstein came along...)
'Come and see the violence inherent in the System.'

TonyLB

Quote from: Doug Ruff on September 27, 2005, 03:51:02 AM
I'm a bit behind on the rules for this game, but isn't it still the case that something can be 'proven' and then disproven later? That the difference between an Opinion and the Truth is the difference between only a few people (or one person) having an opinion, and nearly everyone having the same opinion.
I don't think you're all that far behind on the rules:  I don't think this particular issue has ever been discussed.  I agree that Truths should definitely be something that you can disprove.  But it should be hard ... much, much, much harder than having opposed the formation of that Truth in the first place.  Otherwise it robs the choice of holding a "false" opinion of its meaning.

And the more I think about it, the more that choice has some really, really cool dramatic possibilities.  Random example:  Wesley does something terrible to the Angel-gang (no further spoilers!)  The 'truth' "Wesley is anathema, not to be spoken of or contacted" is offered up.  Angel sells out his Opinion "Wesley: Trustworthy."  Gunn sells out Opinion "Wesley:  Homie, even if he's white."  Cordelia has long since stopped thinking about Wesley, and has no Opinions left to sell out.

Fred is offered a nice lump-sum payment for her powerful Opinions "Wesley:  Dedicated warrior of good," "Wesley:  Sorta hot" and "Wesley:  Mentor."  She refuses to sell.  No matter what other people know about the man, she's sticking with what she believes about him.  Even when Wesley himself tries to buy her out, she sticks to her guns.  That means something.

That example also makes me think I know how you should have to disprove Truths:  not all at once, but point by point.  They should need to be whittled down, bit by painful bit.

The immediate counterargument that leaps to mind is "But you can create Truths all at once!  Surely if you are working on whittling down 'Sylvia:  Murderer' then you can't just add 'Sylvia:  Innocent' before having finished whittling down the prior fact."  But I'm not sure that's really a problem.  On some levels it would be cool to have everyone know both those things at once.  It would lend mechanical support to the notion that people don't get over such notions overnight.  Sure, they accept that Sylvia can come back to the coven (because they know she's Innocent) but nobody turns their back on her (because they still also 'know' she's a Murderer).
Just published: Capes
New Project:  Misery Bubblegum

Stefan / 1of3

Buying out opinions might work, but you somehow already mentioned another idea:

QuoteIf you're going to answer a question like that (as, for instance, Joss Whedon does very well) then the answer needs to raise lots of other, equally (or more) interesting questions.

So what about giving out free opinions, when a Truth is reveled? Or perhaps making up new opinions cheaper, when they build upon a Truth.

Sydney Freedberg

Over in that playtest thread,

Quote from: Joshua BishopRoby on September 26, 2005, 10:23:51 PM
On the whole I concur -- suspense is more interesting that knowledge.  However, the primary caveat I see to that is that knowledge is interesting when it is useful. [e.g.] If they could have used "Flavius is Gay 2d6" or whatever in some later scene....

I just wanted to reintroduce & emphasize that thought here. "Okay, we found out Sydney is the traitor [hey!]" or "you are my father, sure, whatever" ends it; but "now I can use Sydney's treachery in any subsequent scene with her! [huh?]" or "I must redeem my father!" keeps it going. I've always enjoyed ongoing games where something I introduce or fight for earlier gets established and then keeps on coming back (especially when other people like it enough to start using it); why not make that a mechanic, whereby Opinions congeal into Truths that then become usable "terrain" in the world of the story?

TonyLB

First, off, on the "Sydney = her? = huh?" thing, I was talking about Sydney Bristow from Alias.

On the congealing Opinion into Truth, I agree completely.  The Truths need to be resources that mechanically inform later play.  I was sort of figuring that the strength of the Truth you create correlates directly to the total of Opinions that you need to offer to cash out in order to create it.  So if you want "Buffy and Spike are in a relationship" to be a big deal to the story, long-term, you can't just say "Okay, they're in a relationship now."  You've got to set it up so that, in order to say that, you've got to either confirm a lot of suspicion, or try to disabuse a lot of people of their mistaken beliefs, or both.

Spoiler Side-note:  The Buffy/Spike thing is great, because some Scoobies (particularly Xander) had two opinions, one about Buffy, one about Spike, and you clearly had to buy out one of them, but not necessarily both.  "Spike is worthless undead scum," and "Buffy only gets it on with the hero" can't both coexist with the Buffy/Spike relationship.  But either one of them can easily co-exist with that Truth, if the other opinion is trashed.

Likewise, if you want "Flavius is Gay" to be more than a blip in the story, you first have to spend the time to build up Opinion and uncertainty, so that the cost of buying out those Opinions is high.  Declaring it from a standing start would imply that it's unimportant.

Now, as to how to make these Truths inherently drive the next evolution of the story, I have some thoughts, but I think I'll listen to others for a while, before I charge on ahead any further.
Just published: Capes
New Project:  Misery Bubblegum

Sydney Freedberg

Quote from: TonyLB on September 27, 2005, 12:24:38 PM
First, off, on the "Sydney = her? = huh?" thing, I was talking about Sydney Bristow from Alias.

I know, I know; Jennifer Garner = angular bone structure = fun to look at.

And I've certainly noticed in our Capes campaign that if you do an "I am your father!" declaration in free narration, or even as the result of winning a single conflict, it doesn't have mechanical force; you need to roll a lot of Inspirations into it over time, and the system isn't really set up to do that kind of slow burn. Whereas with Misery Bubblegum, you're setting up to do exactly that.

Graham W

Tony,

This probably won't be the most helpful post you've ever had, but still.

I spent ages reading this thread, and the playtest thread, last night. I found it hard to understand the rules. After about 15 minutes, I think I understood what you were trying to do with the Opinions. I'm still not sure of the mechanism for buying out an opinion.

On the bright side, the reason I spent so long reading was because I really liked the ideas. It's incredibly powerful. I love the idea that other players can endow your character with attributes ("I think Barry is secretly gay", "I think Barry is a member of a religious cult that forbids fraternisation with the opposite sex"). And I also like the idea that I can choose which of those attributes I want to become reality.

It's very clever that everyone gets rewarded for this process: both the person who had the idea and me, for choosing which attribute I want my character to have. And I agree that, after it's been firmly established that Barry is gay, the reward process should stop. (Because, once we know Barry is gay, there's no interest in seeing him casting longing glances at men in the street)

Would you mind summarising for me - as though I'm a particularly stupid, slightly drunk player at a convention - what you're trying to achieve with these rules? And what the rules are - especially for buying out - in very simple terms?

Graham

TonyLB

Quote from: Graham Walmsley on September 27, 2005, 12:39:47 PM
Would you mind summarising for me - as though I'm a particularly stupid, slightly drunk player at a convention - what you're trying to achieve with these rules? And what the rules are - especially for buying out - in very simple terms?

The first of those I can do pretty easily (in fact, quoting from my in-progress playtest rules).

The second of those I'm going to have to hold off on a little bit.  I'm trying to do two things to the rules right now:  Introduce these general ideas and fix the confusing conflict resolution system that it was saddled with.  Fixing that CR system is a fair bit of work, which I'm going through, but until it's done I can't give you solid mechanics.  When it's done I'll put up a new PDF of rules for folks to look over.

So, what I am trying to achieve with these rules:

Quote from: Misery Bubblegum Playtest Alpha1. What is the game about?

Misery Bubblegum is a game about looking at yourself through the eyes of other people.  In many games the opinions of other characters have only an indirect effect on your character (by motivating them to different actions). In Misery Bubblegum, the opinions of other people are solid, mechanical truths. These opinions have as much direct impact on what your character can do as (say) her own native abilities ... and far more impact than her opinion of herself.  At its core, Misery Bubblegum is about the breathless gamble of making yourself vulnerable. When other people can control you and hurt you then they can also free you. They can save you.

2. What do the characters do?

Characters worry about who they are and what other people think of them. They act to try to influence those opinions, or even just to discover something about themself. They try to make a life and an identity for themselves that they can be happy with.

Along the way, they learn things about themselves that may mean that they can no longer be happy being the person they first set out to become, or that they can be happy being someone they'd never imagined. That's a good thing. It's the corner-stone of building maturity.  Characters will often also face external problems or opportunities: they may fight the undead, or pilot gigantic fighting robots, or scheme to take over their ancestral home in the center of the multiverse. All of this is great, great stuff as long as it constantly provides new angles to examine what's important in the game: what your character thinks of herself, what other people think of her, and what she thinks of other people.

3.  What do players do?

Players decide what characters need. They decide whether their own character needs to succeed or fail, to feel good or bad, at this stage of their quest for themself.  They also decide the same thing for every other character.

Players decide, absolutely, what their character thinks of other characters. This is their main tool for trying to give other characters what they need.

Players create fragments of situation (an enemy here, a case of mistaken identity there) and try to get other people interested enough to entangle these fragments into their own problems and goals. If the player succeeds at this then they gain more resources for putting their character through the wringer. Players make their character vulnerable, and try to get other people interested enough to confuse, hurt and (maybe) comfort the character. If the player succeeds at this then they gain more resources to create fragments of situation.
Just published: Capes
New Project:  Misery Bubblegum

LordSmerf

Tony,

This will be short, but...  If you want to ensure that truths only get formed about stuff people care about, how about some sort of system by which the mechanical power of a truth is related to the opinions it buys out?  Two ways this could go: 1) It's got power related to the number of dice it cost to buy, or 2) It has breadth within the game based on the specific opinions it did buy out.  Does that make sense?

Thomas
Current projects: Caper, Trust and Betrayal, The Suburban Crucible

Shawn De Arment

I have to agree with Doug Ruff, I don't think the game is well served by Truth.

We like to think Truth with a capital T exists, but all we have in the real world is opinions and observations.

You may have thought that you "made it infinitely clear beyond any shadow of a doubt that Flavius was in fact gay", but I don't think you did. What occurred could easily be explained if someone cast an "excitable boy" spell at the right moment. There was an upper class girl (named Stephanie?) who called all of us (including Flavius) losers. I suspect she may have had a problem with Flavius which required her to "prove" he was gay. All pure conjecture, but a valid narrative that I/Glenda would have "proved" given time.

Many times have we seen "proof" that someone is a bad guy in the Harry Potter series, only to find out later that more is going on than was originally revealed. Professor Snapes is an obvious example.

Would establishing concrete "Truth" improve Harry Potter or Misery Bubblegum? Not in my opinion.
Working on: One Night (formally called CUP)

TonyLB

Shawn, you sound like you think you're arguing against somebody here.  If that's the case, can you make it clear who you think that is?
Just published: Capes
New Project:  Misery Bubblegum

Josh Roby

Quote from: 1of3 on September 27, 2005, 11:11:31 AM
QuoteIf you're going to answer a question like that (as, for instance, Joss Whedon does very well) then the answer needs to raise lots of other, equally (or more) interesting questions.

So what about giving out free opinions, when a Truth is reveled? Or perhaps making up new opinions cheaper, when they build upon a Truth.

I'm going to have to agree, here: iterative complexity beats final resolution any day.  Well, in the land of serial entertainment, at least.
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TonyLB

Quote from: Joshua BishopRoby on September 27, 2005, 04:48:13 PM
I'm going to have to agree, here: iterative complexity beats final resolution any day.  Well, in the land of serial entertainment, at least.

Sure, but I don't think that's the dichotomy that's actually being presented.  The "pay-off" you'd be getting would presumably be in Opinion dice.  While they can be used purely in order to sway conflicts, that's eating your seed corn:  the optimal solution is to put some of your pay-off into further Opinions that you hope to make a profit on in future.  It being an optimal strategy, a good number of players are going to do it, because it's what the system rewards.

So I think the dichotomy is more a question of barter versus currency.  Does resolving an Opinion give you another Opinion directly?  Or does it give you currency that you turn into another Opinion?

Does that make sense?  Have I missed something that you're saying?
Just published: Capes
New Project:  Misery Bubblegum