[cite]Autore: Moreno Roncucci[/cite]But Andrea is a firm believer in the "You play, I go to the Bar" Game mastering method and did leave us alone to play...
Actually I'm a firm believer in the idea that every larp should use its own method. Carsten Andreasen's
Di tutti i mondi scenario, which someone has cited, suggests the "You play, I go to the bar" method (if you want to call it that way), thus when running it I use that method (even though I've found it a bit inadequate at times - but my priority was to experiment precisely that "extreme masterless" method, so to get a clear idea of its advantages and disadvantages). My own
Storia di terra e d'acqua scenario recommends a jeepform-like method (even though it's actually more similar to what I could call the Albini-Bellinzona method, as I didn't have any clue about jeepform at the time), thus when running it I use that method. My own Karstic Style larps imply the strict use of
a completely different method where the organiser, during pre-larp preparation, interacts heavily with the participants (who also interact deeply between each other, so to build a common understanding of the larp), but he doesn't interact at all during the larp proper (in order to not break the secondary reality illusion) - thus when running those larps of mine I obviously use that method. It is also noticeable that I sometimes run slightly different versions of the same scenario, each of which requires a different method (as it is for
Români: Un'altra vita, da capo, which I have run as a Karstic Style larp but also as a rather traditional convention larp where the organiser interacts with the participants also during the larp proper). Something that I do NOT do, however, is using always the same method for every larp, because, you know, despite what someone thinks, larps are very, very different from each other. :-)
In the case of
Serpente di cenere I have understood, both from the scenario and from Jiituomas's behaviour when I saw him running it, that the organiser is expected to have a word with the participants before the larp - so to clarify doubtful things - and should privately answer to questions during the larp proper, and I always did that. I was experimenting with Jiituomas's idea of emergent play at the time, and I still believe, basing my assumptions on post-larp evaluations from tens of larpers with, I assure you, very different backgrounds, that this method fits the concept quite nicely.