You know, I hadn't looked that carefully at the Factotum before, so I hadn't realized that it wasn't just a 4E style encounter mechanic - ie., you can recharge IP with a few minutes rest. If encounter is supposed to be meta, like an entire day of investigating crime in a city might be a single encounter, then ugh, that's terrible, it encourages stupid tricks to recharge.
Indeed, one of the many many many many problems with the Factotum Class is that unlike even most other encounter based classes, it doesn't lay out a non-encounter system for controlling resources. Something as simple as an action cost to refresh IP, or specific period of rest, could vastly improve the class by negating 70-80% of the times DMs would even have to come up with an answer to whether or not an encounter is occurring, and the resulting class would be nearly identical in power (except for the inability to store up IP from previous encounters, but again, that's a bug not a feature).
Not at all Robby, words are a means to encode an idea and transmit it to another, whom in turn must decipher the words back into an idea. RAI is truly the purest form of interpretation, but people like you and Kelik use what I like call "RAW". And yes those quotation marks are intentional, I rarely ever dignify a fallacy or incorrect opinion as RAW nor do I wish to insult the rulebook's RAW text by assuming they were written with such a unique IQ level.
This is basically nonsense. You are claiming that it is literally impossible for any person to ever even conceive of a class that can save up points between encounters, but that's silly. It's not a very good design, but the idea that no one could ever even conceive of it, such that when someone writes rules that do that you have to "not speak english" to believe that the words mean what they actually mean, instead of some completely different thing they don't mean is just crazy talk.
Far more likely, the words mean what they mean in natural english, and the person either did or didn't make a mistake, but finding that out would require asking them.
How many times in the last year have you seen that come up in a pointless language debate? And how many times have I popped in telling you are stupid it is? And how many times must I do so again before people finally learn to grasp the concept?
And there's the rub, it's not actually about whether or not the rules do or don't say X, it's about you thinking that when there is any question at all about what the rules mean, that anyone who thinks differently than you is an idiot who is incapable of reading, because only your personal conception of what was meant could ever be right.
Yeah, most people who spend any serious amount of their time professionally reading or writing quickly learn that this is nonsense, there are often multiple possible interpretations to something written, and to claim that yours is always write and that anyone who disagrees with you is an idiot basically just proves that you are rejecting what is actually said in favor of your conception of it.