I guess I should have started this post with one thing I had on my mind but didn't write down: I"m not going to use this angle any time SOON. I was simply wondering if anyone else had put thought into how the legal system worked for people getting caught with illegal inventory would be prosecuted and/or what would reactions be if the item in question is the persons own arm.
I agree with the point that I should let the characters (all of them, even though the other guy who has restricted items has so fewer) make sure if they need fake ID's and if they are covered properly. The reason why I was debating that was simply because he did by fake ID's already, so he was aware of a possible circumstance but missed a spot. This doesn't mean that I'm going to have a cop question him every block he walks, I wanted to be prepared if I wanted to throw that curve ball.
RHat: Yes, I know from my posts that it seems like I single this player out constantly. You know what? I do single him out. Fact is, this player is the reason I came to this forum in the first place. I have to vent in order for what I'm saying to reflect properly. This player is an inconsiderate asshole to put it nicely. He's a power player, a min-maxer, AND an arrogant sonoffabitch when it comes to role playing. I did Pathfinder before Shadowrunner, and I was the DM then. I put between 5-10 hours every week to get a campaign ready for this group, and every Saturday rolled around and my campaign villeins were one-shotted more often then not. I had him scrap characters because they were unbalanced and make new ones. He did, presented them in a very lack luster fashion, and then turns out it's a god damn one trick pony with unrealistic power. Whats that? Because you took one level in Druid and became a cavalier and you crafted your own magical items and you can charge a fucking WALL OF FORCE and kill it? That's ok, I didn't want to use that plot hook anyway.
And then I thought I'd catch a break, Shadowrunner. An RPG that no one at the table has played yet? We're all on equal grounds? Sure I'll be the GM, I just hope I can remember enough of the rules to make it work. We'll just need to help each other out! Well it turns out that once a min-maxer, always a min-maxer. While I was still trying to learn how guns work and that there are no actual classes in this game, this player had a copy of the rule book two weeks prior and discovered that all you need is to max out your money and buy immortality. I was still too new to this game to know how to over come 28 armor on a "level one" PC, so he blatantly strolled into chaos, stood there and laughed, and all I could do was keep shooting when I knew how it was going to end. Spend rest of night with him basking in his glory.
Note: I found out later that the reason why he was such a power gamer in pathfinder is because he went onto forum sites and took builds from other people to use against me. That's why I came to the forums, and it has worked wonders.
Have I learned new ways to deal with him? Yes. Have I evolved as a GM? I'd like to think so. If it wasn't for this site, I would not have learned ways to both deal with him and add a touch of mortality for the rest of the group.
So why would I keep looking for reasons to mess with him? Two; firstly, I am GENUINELY curious about Shadowrunner legalities. But mainly, after my "God damn pirates!" campaign, the culminated work of 20 hours over two weeks to plan (four locations, gang battles, cyber combat, magical duels, flash bang traps, coast guard facility infiltration, over sea speed boat chase, etc), he has the gaul to say AND I FUCKING QUOTE, "I'm gonna go ahead and say that the reason this campaign went so well was because of me. If I wasn't so hard to deal with you wouldn't have to improve".
So none of that session is really my triumph? It's the case of the player who doesn't think beyond his own character. I'm the GM because no one else will take the mantle, but that doesn't mean I don't want to have fun with this. Why do I group with this guy still even if he irritates me? This is simple, we're all military and one of the people in the group is both of our friends. If I refuse to play anymore, I'm sad AND alone and no one who plays this game wants to truly be without a gaming group.
TLDR: This player is a power playing asshole who's inconsiderate to the effort I put into the campaigns who I am in return forced to keep seeing on a weekly basis.