There really doesn't have to be a conflict between setting emulation and mechanical balance.
There doesn't have to be, but they're not always going to match up. Harry's a guy who could level a building in seconds if he was in a bad mood, and is capable of offensive, defensive, investigative, and other -ive feats that his mortal partners couldn't dream of. You can nerf all that to make it balance with a pure mortal, but eventually that takes away from the feel of the setting.
Slapping some reasonable restrictions on ACaEBG would actually have made the setting emulation better, now that I think about it. Having the "even ground between mortal and monster" power work really well with supernatural strength is just weird.
So you're saying instead of making it implicit, via the established use of the power in the setting and what we have of its write-up in the book, they should have made it explicit? Okay, that I can agree with, with the caveat that I think it's reasonable to assume what the intention was regardless.
And making retractable Claws just as cheap as non-retractable ones wouldn't have damaged the setting at all. Nor would have writing the powers in OW properly. Nor would have making Orbius non-stupid.
Maybe not damaged, but it wouldn't necessarily reflect the setting either, and I think that was the intention. They were answering the question, "Okay, vampires and ghouls have big scary claws, how does that affect their attacks?" more than, "How much refresh is adding Weapons:2 to fists attacks worth?"
As for Orbius, honestly, I think the problem there might be a misinterpretation. I don't recall seeing anything in its write-up precluding someone from rolling an action just to yank the stupid thing off.
With respect, I'm pretty sure I know what would hurt me better than you do. And that would hurt me.
With respect, few people really know what's good for them. I speak from experience here, because I think you're a lot like I used to be, and I didn't really change until reality hit me repeatedly over the head.
What I'm talking about is how it's been mentioned on a couple occasions how it's irritating and comes off as really arrogant when you act like an authority and declare one side of a discussion absolutely correct or incorrect. One such post, as I recall, got you a warning from the moderators. Or at least, the tone of the post did, which I think was borne out of your certainty.
That's what I'm talking about when I say that it wouldn't hurt you to be less certain, though perhaps I phrased it badly--not to
be less certain, but not to
act so certain. When you act as if you're the authority on things and start passing judgment (without having actual authority), it can make you come off as very abrasive, puts people on the defensive, and in general leads to more argument and complication than is necessary.
I know that's not what you intend, and you seem a decent fellow, but you rub people wrong a lot less if you allow that you may be wrong--even when you're sure you're right.
Nope. The fact that Harry is mechanically speaking an idiot for not tossing out Orbius instead of his shield spell is a problem for everyone. The fact that Mouse is due to sloppy writing a social powerhouse is a problem for everyone. And the fact that it's impossible to tell which numbers to use with Incite Emotion is a problem for everyone.
I'm not sure how Harry's an idiot for not using a spell that's practically an instant first-law violation. I mean, it's a straight-up murder spell. Mouse stops being a social powerhouse when you remember he's a dog and compel that--then again, dogs tend to be popular and not concerned about social stigma anyway. I could totally believe an intelligent dog running circles, so to speak, around a human when it comes to getting people on its side. I'm not sure what you mean about Incite Emotion, I thought the power was pretty clearly written.
At any rate, we probably
should drop this and get back to the topic of the thread.