I found was the administrative restriction on D2/P3/the different names its been called for units. I always was given the impression, and even told on different occasions, that entering there as a unit was seen as breaking a physical rule, and you'd be confronted by the admins by it.
But I'm saying, don't do stuff to prevent rules that MIGHT be broken. An admin should step in if bad things happen, but I'd appreciate if there was less preventing of roleplay simply because theres a possibility rules could end up being broken. I mean technically, there's a possibility to break rules in any situation.
Quote from: Lone Wanderer on January 14, 2014, 11:26:50 AMBut I'm saying, don't do stuff to prevent rules that MIGHT be broken. An admin should step in if bad things happen, but I'd appreciate if there was less preventing of roleplay simply because theres a possibility rules could end up being broken. I mean technically, there's a possibility to break rules in any situation.thats perfectly fine and nickneros idea is valid, but you cant always just look at it as 'walking into restricted zone', he might be metagaming something etc etc
i think the lines of "ic is ic" is pretty much the relevant tl;dr of this threadadministration shouldn't be involved in something unless actual server rules are broken
but admins often linger on the edge of involvement because rules can be broken very easily in certain situations
Quote from: smt on January 14, 2014, 06:54:50 PMbut admins often linger on the edge of involvement because rules can be broken very easily in certain situationsok let's say a unit goes rogue because his best friend who was also a unit was shot in the face by his superiors for accepting bribesrather than administration flying in and physgunning the unit who's about to walk into d6 because he doesn't have adequate authorisations for going rogue they should just ~observe~ the roleplay and see how it unfolds and provided the unit doesn't take out a gun and start rdm'ing people without rp i don't see why they need to be involved