Post number #603966, ID: 33b0be
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Alright, so the background for my character (Stars without Number is the game BTW) is that he is a mechanic on a caste-based planet that wanted to travel and drive a taco truck for a friend of his dad's. My GM takes explicit issue with this. When I first talked to him about it in text, he didn't bring anything up. Afterward in VC however he asks me to remove the taco truck reference, saying that outer worlds wouldn't have advanced enough food knowledge to either know or make them.
Post number #603968, ID: 33b0be
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2/2 Only after arguing with him that that is completely preposterous for about ten minutes, does he actually bring up that taco trucks would have never existed in the first place because everything is owned by Caste Leaders/Trade Unions, and there is no civilian private industry. To me he just seems to be pulling it out his arse, but what do I know. I'm just someone who's tired of constant, unending, grimdark.
>cunts chose odin
Post number #603969, ID: 33b0be
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3/2 And just to cap off my vent: Even before he brought up food tech, he just outright said he didn't like it and I had to almost beat an answer out of him as to why.
My sincerist apologies if this is spam, but I'd rather rant here and be told I am wrong than lose a friend to hubris.
Post number #603996, ID: 0c5f04
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Seems like the two of you are just not on the same page on the theme/tone of the roleplay. I'm not gonna put the blame on anyone.
Find some way to get your and your GM's perspective to align, or you can just leave. Won't be fun if you're not on the same page
| Alright, so the background for my character (Stars without Number is the game BTW) is that he is a mechanic on a caste-based planet that wanted to travel and drive a taco truck for a friend of his dad's. My GM takes explicit issue with this.
When I first talked to him about it in text, he didn't bring anything up. Afterward in VC however he asks me to remove the taco truck reference, saying that outer worlds wouldn't have advanced enough food knowledge to either know or make them.