The context of this meme (which I didn’t fully lay out in the title, so that’s on me) is also setting the monster up ahead of time as having a deadly looking gaze. The meme is reflecting back the immediate assumptions that people will make based off of a description of a monster, much like how your characters should also react in the same situation.
The DM needs to use language to describe a situation and put the same feeling into you that your characters are also experiencing. By referring to a monsters gaze, that could mean a hundred different things. Referring to it within combat is just adding to that anxiety your character is experiencing. Are they just piercing eyes? Or is it something more?
If anything, this is the most accurate way I can think of to get you as a player to feel the same thing that your character also feels.
You say adversarial but it isn’t the DMs job to hold your hand through combat. It is your DMs job to provide a thrilling and engaging experience that pulls you in. Its your job as a player to make the decisions based on the information given you. If everytime that question is ever asked is only for a monster with a gaze attack, then you as a DM are doing a pisspoor job of disguising monster abilities by telegraphing everything they can do ahead of time.
Totally understandable take. Definitely have had townspeople giving differing accounts of the beast they encountered in the woods so players aren’t sure if it’s a vampire or a ghost or werebeast etc so they’re on their toes and keeping an eye out for anything (this is an oversimplification but you get the point).
I would never ask a player if they are averting their eyes unless I had reason to believe they would (like I said above maybe they were already warned). If they touch a poisoned object I’m not asking if their hand is gloved or if they’re using a cloth. If they are doing something out of the ordinary I expect them to say as much unless it’s already established that their character always wears gloves or something.
Setting the tone is important and also a good time to give them some information on the monster. If it can shoot spikes I might refer to the spikes as like the quills of a porcupine or something to try to telegraph that if it’s bright enough and their skills are high enough to normally make that connection. If they misconstrue tone setting for actual information I generally do not correct them unless I think their PC would know better in which case I will sometimes outright correct them or have them roll for additional clarification. It’s hard to know what their PC would actually be able to gather if they were a real person, so I try not to penalize them for what may at some point just be my failure to describe what they see as a DM.
Different play/DM styles are good though. Lets everyone find a table that’s right for them.
The context of this meme (which I didn’t fully lay out in the title, so that’s on me) is also setting the monster up ahead of time as having a deadly looking gaze. The meme is reflecting back the immediate assumptions that people will make based off of a description of a monster, much like how your characters should also react in the same situation.
The DM needs to use language to describe a situation and put the same feeling into you that your characters are also experiencing. By referring to a monsters gaze, that could mean a hundred different things. Referring to it within combat is just adding to that anxiety your character is experiencing. Are they just piercing eyes? Or is it something more?
If anything, this is the most accurate way I can think of to get you as a player to feel the same thing that your character also feels.
You say adversarial but it isn’t the DMs job to hold your hand through combat. It is your DMs job to provide a thrilling and engaging experience that pulls you in. Its your job as a player to make the decisions based on the information given you. If everytime that question is ever asked is only for a monster with a gaze attack, then you as a DM are doing a pisspoor job of disguising monster abilities by telegraphing everything they can do ahead of time.
Totally understandable take. Definitely have had townspeople giving differing accounts of the beast they encountered in the woods so players aren’t sure if it’s a vampire or a ghost or werebeast etc so they’re on their toes and keeping an eye out for anything (this is an oversimplification but you get the point).
I would never ask a player if they are averting their eyes unless I had reason to believe they would (like I said above maybe they were already warned). If they touch a poisoned object I’m not asking if their hand is gloved or if they’re using a cloth. If they are doing something out of the ordinary I expect them to say as much unless it’s already established that their character always wears gloves or something.
Setting the tone is important and also a good time to give them some information on the monster. If it can shoot spikes I might refer to the spikes as like the quills of a porcupine or something to try to telegraph that if it’s bright enough and their skills are high enough to normally make that connection. If they misconstrue tone setting for actual information I generally do not correct them unless I think their PC would know better in which case I will sometimes outright correct them or have them roll for additional clarification. It’s hard to know what their PC would actually be able to gather if they were a real person, so I try not to penalize them for what may at some point just be my failure to describe what they see as a DM.
Different play/DM styles are good though. Lets everyone find a table that’s right for them.