Offering unsolicited advice while drawing attention to the individual you are advising is "calling someone out" though. This is objectively true. One doesn't have to assign negativity to it I suppose, if they don't want to, but that is objectively what it is.

And so what if they are too sensitive for you? You are too sensitive to other peoples' game play for me? I'm oversensitive. You're oversensitive. We're all oversensitive. What now? This is where it stops becoming about helping someone else and just becomes about the advisor not being taken seriously in my opinion.

Quote Originally Posted by JohnSpawnVFX View Post
Let me know which school has teachers allowing students to answer incorrectly to a question and only let's them know they were wrong afterwards, in private.
That is the exact definition of a solicited question. j/s

No random teacher will be walking around the classroom past desks, looking down at student papers, then suddenly stop and draw attention to them and let the whole class know they answered a question wrong. They kneel down, they speak in a soft voice, they ask questions and allow the student to guide themselves while coaching.