Chill
Out
Well,
if you're reading this, it stands to
reason that you like gaming. You probably
like it a lot. That's cool -- obviously,
so do I. But there are degrees of liking
gaming. I was just thinking about that
recently as I recalled a story from
a few years back.
When
I was in college, I gamed a lot. (Now,
don't get me wrong -- I studied a lot
too. But, you know how it is.) The last
two years of college I had some great
friends. Three or four of them all lived
together in an apartment, and I lived
alone, so we often gamed over there
until all hours of the night. They had
a TV too (I didn't), so that meant I
had someplace to watch Star Trek.
It was a cool place and I enjoyed going
over there a lot. My apartment was cool
too, but it was small.
Anyway,
one of the guys who lived in the apartment,
Steve, was a great player and really
liked playing roleplaying games. I mean
really liked gaming. He'd play
every day if he could.
One
week, another friend, John, couldn't
play. He had to study for a test. I
didn't want to play without John because
that night's session was really focused
around him. (John's character was part
of an ancient bloodline that could be
traced back to an individual named Malhavoc,
who was descended from some forgotten
gods, and the group was about to explore
a ruined city once dedicated to those
gods.)
So
no game that week. John sat at home
and studied. And Steve sat at home and
studied... John. To say that Steve was
mad that we weren't playing is a huge
understatement. Steve parked himself
outside John's door, and if John took
so much as a five-minute study break,
Steve yelled "I'm not gaming tonight
because you needed to study so bad --
so get back to your oh-so-important
books!" (Actually, that's a censored
version of what Steve said, I think).
Steve,
quite clearly, needed to chill out.
His "liking gaming-ometer"
was in the red zone. Any
DM would be flattered to have someone
love their game so much, but sometimes
it can go too far.