For ten years, their love was a steady, unshakable bond, a sanctuary where happiness thrived without question. When the world shut down, they found a new shared passion in Dungeons and Dragons, weaving magic and adventure into their weekly Zoom sessions, a bright spot amid the monotony.
Yet beneath the laughter and quests, a quiet imbalance grew. While he crafted fantastical worlds as the Dungeon Master, she carried the weight of everyday life—cooking, cleaning, driving—her efforts unnoticed as the chores quietly piled up, fraying the edges of their once effortless partnership.

AITA for blowing up at my husband because he counted his work on our DND game as one of his chores?



















According to relationship expert Dr. Harriet Lerner, author of ‘The Dance of Anger,’ unresolved resentment often stems from unspoken needs and a perceived imbalance in effort or appreciation. In this scenario, the wife (OP) is communicating a need for practical support (chore completion) but expresses it through a transactional jab related to the husband’s hobby, which immediately shifts the focus from the kitchen to appreciation for his DMing work.
The core issue here revolves around the concept of ‘mental load’ and the definition of labor. The husband views his Dungeon Master (DM) work as organizing and maintaining their social life, framing it as an essential contribution. However, for the wife, chores like cooking and cleaning are non-negotiable maintenance tasks necessary for the household’s basic function, whereas the DM role is a voluntary, high-effort hobby. When the husband counters that they can afford to outsource the chores, he dismisses the wife’s need for partnership equity; even if they have the money, the expectation in an equal partnership is shared contribution, not outsourced management.
The OP’s immediate reaction, while stemming from valid stress and unequal chore distribution, was emotionally charged and targeted the husband’s source of pride (his hobby), causing understandable hurt. For future interactions, the OP should separate the two issues. First, address the existing chore imbalance directly, focusing on specific, measurable tasks rather than making conditional statements about kitchen cleanup. Second, acknowledge the value of his DM effort separately, perhaps by asking him to clearly delineate which parts of DMing he feels are equitable to specific chores, thus creating a mutually agreed-upon division of labor rather than relying on implied equivalence.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.







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Info: What did the conversations about the chore load look like before this? Or did you simply just dash his excitement without warning?







The person writing the post is experiencing internal conflict, feeling that the division of household labor is uneven, especially under current life stress. The central conflict lies in the disagreement over whether the husband’s significant investment in his hobby (Dungeons and Dragons Dungeon Mastering) should be considered equivalent to the wife’s necessary domestic chores, a definition she strongly disputes.
If the goal is a sustainable, happy partnership, does equating a chosen, enjoyable hobby with essential, repetitive household maintenance undermine the shared responsibility of running a home, or does the organizational and creative labor of DMing genuinely qualify as an equivalent contribution to the partnership’s well-being?







