Check out our Event Calendar! View birthdays, holidays and upcoming tournaments!
My Type 2 list would include Nate Leverson.
...but in the end we all kind of have an idea of those players we view as good or great and most of them will be pretty accurate, overrate some people, underrate some, and not include some.
@Brian, you should have just pretended you knew the rankings and gave them the names of 5 people in the 2 major categories. Because ultimately, your playgroup is going to believe what you say is true.
Quote from: The Schaefer on August 24, 2018, 05:22:19 PM...but in the end we all kind of have an idea of those players we view as good or great and most of them will be pretty accurate, overrate some people, underrate some, and not include some.I highlighted this phrase because this is my point every time the issue comes up....this is a subjective discussion in which there is major bias. Everyone uses different criteria to do these rankings. @Brian, you should have just pretended you knew the rankings and gave them the names of 5 people in the 2 major categories. Because ultimately, your playgroup is going to believe what you say is true.
Quote from: soul seeker on August 24, 2018, 06:17:33 PMQuote from: The Schaefer on August 24, 2018, 05:22:19 PM...but in the end we all kind of have an idea of those players we view as good or great and most of them will be pretty accurate, overrate some people, underrate some, and not include some.I highlighted this phrase because this is my point every time the issue comes up....this is a subjective discussion in which there is major bias. Everyone uses different criteria to do these rankings. @Brian, you should have just pretended you knew the rankings and gave them the names of 5 people in the 2 major categories. Because ultimately, your playgroup is going to believe what you say is true.I could just tell them what I think, but it spurred on some questions of my own. We have RNRS and even a hall of fame but no ranking year by year. Not sure if other card games do it or not.
I could just tell them what I think, but it spurred on some questions of my own. We have RNRS and even a hall of fame but no ranking year by year. Not sure if other card games do it or not.
I don’t think RNRS is a good system for that. A player in California can max out in RNRS, but most likely would even hit top 15 at Nats
I have won RNRS in categories that I did not even play at Nats, with easy roads up leading up to it. I am sure others have. I know some people that have a lot of RNRS points that I would not even consider a top 20 player.
Quote from: Jonesy on August 24, 2018, 09:04:52 PMI don’t think RNRS is a good system for that. A player in California can max out in RNRS, but most likely would even hit top 15 at NatsIs there anyone who has actually maxed out regional RNRS and placed in it multiple years in a row without ever placing at Nats? I have no idea, I'm genuinely curious. If someone has done that then I would indeed be wrong.
Quote from: Jonesy on August 24, 2018, 09:04:52 PMI don’t think RNRS is a good system for that. A player in California can max out in RNRS, but most likely would even hit top 15 at NatsI mean... are you talking about the past or currently? Currently, the player base in California is close to zero so you'd be right about now... but regarding players in the past I'd say you are very wrong.Myself, Kurt, Bryon and lightningninja (Brandon) are all from California and we all placed in the top 3 at Nats. The Hakes are legends in the Type II scene. The number of players on this list can be double or triple if you include players from California placing in the top 15 at Nats over the years. If I remember right I placed in the top 15 in Type I 2 player twice over the 4 or so nationals I went to.My first place in Sealed Deck at Boston Nats was with a player pool that was almost twice the size of the Type II player pool that year. It was like 60 or 70 players participating in Sealed. I also placed fourth in Sealed another year at Missouri Nats (I didn't place due to losing to the first or second place winner in like my 2nd or 3rd game). Those of us who placed at Nats all did it when there was pretty fierce competition. Sorry if I left out the Kramers or the Wolfes. I can't remember if they ever placed in the top 3 in any categories at Nats. Both families did very well in the RNRS over the years. I think most of us old school California folk are still in the top 100 or top 50 of the current all time RNRS list.Sorry I just had to defend us California folk
Quote from: Isildur on August 25, 2018, 03:29:09 AMQuote from: Jonesy on August 24, 2018, 09:04:52 PMI don’t think RNRS is a good system for that. A player in California can max out in RNRS, but most likely would even hit top 15 at NatsI mean... are you talking about the past or currently? Currently, the player base in California is close to zero so you'd be right about now... but regarding players in the past I'd say you are very wrong.Myself, Kurt, Bryon and lightningninja (Brandon) are all from California and we all placed in the top 3 at Nats. The Hakes are legends in the Type II scene. The number of players on this list can be double or triple if you include players from California placing in the top 15 at Nats over the years. If I remember right I placed in the top 15 in Type I 2 player twice over the 4 or so nationals I went to.My first place in Sealed Deck at Boston Nats was with a player pool that was almost twice the size of the Type II player pool that year. It was like 60 or 70 players participating in Sealed. I also placed fourth in Sealed another year at Missouri Nats (I didn't place due to losing to the first or second place winner in like my 2nd or 3rd game). Those of us who placed at Nats all did it when there was pretty fierce competition. Sorry if I left out the Kramers or the Wolfes. I can't remember if they ever placed in the top 3 in any categories at Nats. Both families did very well in the RNRS over the years. I think most of us old school California folk are still in the top 100 or top 50 of the current all time RNRS list.Sorry I just had to defend us California folk I know California used to be formidable, I used them as an example because currently from what I know they have dropped off. This thread is becoming something that it was not intended for, so I am going to get it back on track. Here are my top 3 teams currently(3rd place dropped off this year, but I full expect them to be back). Normally I would separate it by individual, but these players have only played with each other at Nats for the past 3 or so years.1. John Earley/Gabe Isbell2. Josiah Beers/ Brian Jones3. Justin Alstad/ Jayden AlstadI would be interested in hearing anyone's thoughts on Booster, if that is even possible. lol
Quote from: Jonesy on August 25, 2018, 08:22:58 AMQuote from: Isildur on August 25, 2018, 03:29:09 AMQuote from: Jonesy on August 24, 2018, 09:04:52 PMI don’t think RNRS is a good system for that. A player in California can max out in RNRS, but most likely would even hit top 15 at NatsI mean... are you talking about the past or currently? Currently, the player base in California is close to zero so you'd be right about now... but regarding players in the past I'd say you are very wrong.Myself, Kurt, Bryon and lightningninja (Brandon) are all from California and we all placed in the top 3 at Nats. The Hakes are legends in the Type II scene. The number of players on this list can be double or triple if you include players from California placing in the top 15 at Nats over the years. If I remember right I placed in the top 15 in Type I 2 player twice over the 4 or so nationals I went to.My first place in Sealed Deck at Boston Nats was with a player pool that was almost twice the size of the Type II player pool that year. It was like 60 or 70 players participating in Sealed. I also placed fourth in Sealed another year at Missouri Nats (I didn't place due to losing to the first or second place winner in like my 2nd or 3rd game). Those of us who placed at Nats all did it when there was pretty fierce competition. Sorry if I left out the Kramers or the Wolfes. I can't remember if they ever placed in the top 3 in any categories at Nats. Both families did very well in the RNRS over the years. I think most of us old school California folk are still in the top 100 or top 50 of the current all time RNRS list.Sorry I just had to defend us California folk I know California used to be formidable, I used them as an example because currently from what I know they have dropped off. This thread is becoming something that it was not intended for, so I am going to get it back on track. Here are my top 3 teams currently(3rd place dropped off this year, but I full expect them to be back). Normally I would separate it by individual, but these players have only played with each other at Nats for the past 3 or so years.1. John Earley/Gabe Isbell2. Josiah Beers/ Brian Jones3. Justin Alstad/ Jayden AlstadI would be interested in hearing anyone's thoughts on Booster, if that is even possible. lolNeeds more Craig Fountain/Matt Brinkman and Sauce/Westy...
Quote from: TheHobbit on August 24, 2018, 04:24:47 PMMy Type 2 list would include Nate Leverson.Nate has made tremendous strides in his development as a player (T2 or otherwise). One thing I would need to see for him to take the next step (specifically as a T2 player) would be to experiment with some new deck types. He pilots his primary T2 deck extremely well, but I think the top players are those who can be successful with various deck strategies.
This whole ranking system is flawed immensely because you are taking into effect one major flaw of Redemption. I cannot voice it here because it will upset people. I hope with the new set it will be different but I doubt it.