Glazunov: Concerning 1: The trope about the Decline and Fall of the RPG Empire is an old one, but Grimlorn isn't simply using that argument and the word "decline" in reference to it. He said it directly in review of a game whose developer is pushing both through heavy PR. It's difficult for me to arrive at any other conclusion than that he took both trope and word from Cleve. Had some fresh modulation of the Decline and Fall been meant, presumably it wouldn't have been phrased as Cleve would, but expressed differently. -Eh, I could be wrong--which of us isn't, aside from Cleve?--but this is how I see it.
Starmaker: Incline / decline is slang widely used on the rather influential website RPGCodex. Before the Sir-Tech archives were discovered, Cleve had been a laughingstock there for ages, and, because people are very unlikely to go back and examine their attitudes, they haven't exactly turned into fanboys overnight when he was found to have been telling the truth. So if someone from the Codex praises the game, the praise is genuine, not sycophantic.
Two points. First, I never implied, much less stated, that anybody who quotes a developer in support of their game was a fanboy, and I never would. That's a demeaning personal attack, a reduction of a human being to a flat caricature. I don't do that under any circumstances, about games or anything else in life. (Pointing out the problems in an action or thought is not the same as the obscene slamming of the person themselves.) So I never questioned whether his praise was genuine or sycophantic--or some mix of the two, since the latter almost always includes some of the former at its base. I'd suggest that all of us, at some time, in some place, have been greatly influenced by advertising that works its way into ourselves, and affects our self-images and the way we perceive the world. Just because my wife got sucked in by a slick car dealer a few years back and started crying to me that we *had* to have a certain car, repeating back the dealer's own verbiage, doesn't mean she's a fangirl of it, or mindless--far from it. She's in several important respects brighter than I am, though I understand communications as a tool of manipulation better.
Second, there's context. Grimlorn didn't mentioned the trope or the word in isolation. He mentioned them in reference to a game whose developer has been slinging around both of these with forceful, well-expressed mini-blogs on Steam's forums. I find it hard to believe the two being so alike--Cleve's, Grimlorn's--is a matter of chance.
We'll just have to agree to disagree about this. -By the way, have you gotten Grimoire yourself? If so, what are your impressions?