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At the beginning everyone was excited, and we had a great crew of people signed up. But as the tournament wore on, 5 players dropped out and 3 more skipped games. That was more than half the players in the tournament.
Unless you're just stating random obvious facts, this happens with ROOT 99% of the time, regardless of what format it's played in. Correlation does not imply causation.
Note ive been playing in the lower half of the circuit the whole time. What I found was players were using either HUGEGEGEGEGE Decks (Andrew im talking about you) to abuse the sideboarding system which is kind of stupid since with a large deck what do you need a sideboard for? If a player wasnt using a large deck then they didnt really know how to properly sideboard or sideboard "creatively" might be a better way to put it. Really though my qualms are not with the concept of best 2/3 sideboarding but my problem is with players not knowing how to sideboard :p
Quote from: Master KChief on February 18, 2013, 05:38:41 PMUnless you're just stating random obvious facts, this happens with ROOT 99% of the time, regardless of what format it's played in. Correlation does not imply causation.Feb/Mar 2012 - 19 players (3 dropped)Apr/May 2012 - 20 players (3 dropped)May/Jun 2012 - 13 players (3 dropped)Jun/Jul 2012 - 8 players (0 dropped)Sep/Oct 2012 - 8 players (0 dropped)Oct/Nov 2012 - 17 players (1 dropped)Dec/Jan 2013 - 13 players (2 dropped)Jan/Feb 2013 - 14 players (5 dropped)So this is NOT what happens 99% of the time in ROOT. Actually it happens less than 0% of the time (to quote your other famous statistic).
I don't think we've ever had this many people drop out, nor have we had this % of players drop out.
And some of the players have specifically mentioned that their reason for dropping was because of the increased time commitment required. So that would be causation.
I know you love this format, and it's kinda your baby, and as I mentioned, I do like the added strategy that it brings to the game. But it is important to also take into consideration the negative side effects of this format.
Quote from: Prof Underwood on February 18, 2013, 09:40:01 PMI don't think we've ever had this many people drop out, nor have we had this % of players drop out. I'm more than sure if you looked easy enough you would find many cases where this statement is blatantly false.
If someone joined but dropped because of their lack of commitment towards time despite viewing the numerous warnings, then they should have never joined in the first place.
Best of 1 games are completely senseless and asinine and only further perpetuates the person who can get the luckiest hands.
I think that some people were just excited about the idea of the format and thought at first that they would have time to play that way. But as the month went on they realized just what a big time commitment it was, and became overwhelmed. It's a classic case of biting off more than you can chew. You can criticize them all you like, but I understand where they're coming from.
Now you've moved on from criticizing the players to criticizing the game of Redemption itself.
Remind me ... why do you play this game?
Actually, how is time possibly an issue with best 2 of 3 when the time limit didn't even change? Was 2 hours still not the allotted time for best 2 of 3 format, as it has been the same for how many months now? You would only have a case if the allowable time was increased.
Do you honestly expect the game to fix itself without the people that actively criticize its faults?
My understanding was that each of the the 3 games got the full 2 hours, so that made for a much longer set of games.
Apparently people were understanding the rules on timing this month in different ways.
No but there's a difference between someone who is: - generally positive about the game, but also points out potential problems and solutions or - generally negative about the game and says that it is "completely senseless and asinine"The first person is helpful and appreciated. The second person is getting on my nerves.
Quote from: Prof Underwood on February 19, 2013, 08:49:54 AMMy understanding was that each of the the 3 games got the full 2 hours, so that made for a much longer set of games.Not sure if serious or trolling. Trying to suggest a complete game could potentially take up to 6 hours is completely absurd.
While that may be absurd for most people, I've played enough games against Mark, and whiteness end enough of his games, to know that it's no stretch to think each of his 3 games would take 2 hours.
Quote from: Gabe on February 19, 2013, 10:06:41 AMWhile that may be absurd for most people, I've played enough games against Mark, and whiteness end enough of his games, to know that it's no stretch to think each of his 3 games would take 2 hours.That is not at all what I'm saying is absurd (albeit rightfully so). I'm saying its absurd for anyone to buy that the total time allotted for ROOT this month per match is 6 hours total.
Lack of clarity reels its ugly head again. Again, I see no reason to assume the total time would be 6 hours since it was explicitly stated absolutely nowhere, coupled with the fact the status quo and actual rules say otherwise.
I liked the obvious strength of best 2 of 3/sideboard: to mitigate luck and have a more strategic matchup. Ideally, I guess Redemption would always use these formats. Unfortunately, the time to invest in possibly 3 games was too much.
The rules say "2 hours per game". Best 2 of 3 is playing 2 or 3 games, so everyone, me included, assumed that each game gets the full time allotment. 2 1/2 years ago when we were doing a ROOT game, a challenge game, and up to 2 bonus games each week, each of those games had a separate time limit.