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I played Angel of the Lord during my brother's rescue attempt because I feared the blocking player was going to make a play to discard a Hero I needed to keep. Yes, the dominant benefited my brother, but it wasn't because I was trying to help my brother--it was simply that I felt that play would be the most beneficial to me and in the end I won a very close game because of that play.
However, should you pick on one player who's in last place, but has been established as a good player?
Multiplayer is total war. Make whatever plays you feel will end up getting you the best position at the end of the day. However, it is unethical to sandbag a notable player when there is no benefit to yourself.
Yes, it's incredibly frustrating. Why go through all that work to become good if it just means that people are going to go after you more?
Before I hand over that lost soul I'm probably going to break the tie for second place by playing FA on one of the "3 soul" players, AND I'm most likely to play it on the player that usually wins all the tournaments.
Quote from: SomeKittens on April 12, 2011, 09:32:06 AMYes, it's incredibly frustrating. Why go through all that work to become good if it just means that people are going to go after you more?Simple solution: If you're playing Booster Draft, don't take it so seriously. It's just that type of category. If you're playing T1-MP, that's your own fault. T1-MP is awful.
QuoteBefore I hand over that lost soul I'm probably going to break the tie for second place by playing FA on one of the "3 soul" players, AND I'm most likely to play it on the player that usually wins all the tournaments.I would be infuriated if I saw this. You had nothing to gain from the play and it was pure spite. Redemption goes way out of its way to avoid NPE and you just created it. If I were hosting the tournament I would even ban you from participating in Multiplayer in the future.I don't play Multiplayer myself, so I would never have a bias in this argument. Sandbagging is wrong, especially in the scenario you just described. Manipulating the scoreboard so that you do well is A-ok, but manipulating it so that someone else does worse is nasty.
On a side note, are we in agreement that Falling Away is a BAD card, for specifically these types of reasons?
Again, I appeal to the precedent of table-talk. It's not illegal, but I've heard of plenty of people being disqualified/threatened with disqualification over it.