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Honestly I am prepared to take full advantage of turn timers at nats. Not to be rude but to try and dodge timeouts. I may even bring a stop watch.
I am sure that adding it all up, I could spend three minutes or more on my turn even if in the end I would do absolutely nothing of consequence during it. I sincerely hope you can win in 8 turns or so, because (just guessing here) that would be all you could expect to get against such a player.
Quote from: EmJayBee83 on April 23, 2015, 06:35:19 AMI am sure that adding it all up, I could spend three minutes or more on my turn even if in the end I would do absolutely nothing of consequence during it. I sincerely hope you can win in 8 turns or so, because (just guessing here) that would be all you could expect to get against such a player.Sure, take the time to consider your options, but if you're saying that you would use up the time every single time just because you can, then that is just being petty.
So...I need to get this straight, a player who wants to avoid timeouts by making sure that the time limits are being enforced is doing something unsportsmanlike, and a sportsmanlike response is to be petty and ensure that time is wasted?
That does not make any sense, and is an inappropriate reaction to a legitimate concern.
If you disagree with the use of a stopwatch, then take it to a judge.
You may not advocate exceeding the time limit, but you are advocating people stall, which is against the rules even if you do it in the time allotted, and is certainly against the spirit of sportsmanship you have claimed to be protecting.
EDIT: I could have sworn someone asked what the time limits officially were, but I can't find it now.
I will. In order to use up as much game time as possible I will, however, wait until my first turn, and then call a judge over for an official ruling as to whether and which non-game materials are allowed at the table.
I have no problem with timers but if you are going to time people you have to be willing to risk the fact that they will slow down just to spite you. Its no more "petty" than timing people. And if winning so important that you need a stopwatch, maybe some extra time to think about your philosophy would be good.
Still a wrong attitude to take ("eye for eye"). Also, avoiding timeouts is different than just timing to 'win the game'.
Quote from: Redoubter on April 23, 2015, 11:41:11 AMStill a wrong attitude to take ("eye for eye"). Also, avoiding timeouts is different than just timing to 'win the game'.They are different things yes but the goals of both are the same so why is one more ethical than the other.
Timing out on purpose to win a game you may not win is not the same as holding a timer to ensure each player gets the most possible turns to try and win. They are different things.
Quote from: TheHobbit on April 23, 2015, 12:29:49 PMQuote from: Redoubter on April 23, 2015, 11:41:11 AMStill a wrong attitude to take ("eye for eye"). Also, avoiding timeouts is different than just timing to 'win the game'.They are different things yes but the goals of both are the same so why is one more ethical than the other.The stated goal of one is to avoid a timeout and ensure that time limits are observed. The stated goal of the other is "to spite" the player using the stopwatch.We may have a good discussion about whether the use of a stopwatch is a good idea (I'm open to it personally, but would not fault a judge for disallowing it), but there is no defending the use of stalling to spite another player.
There's also no stopping it so your point is not valid, it doesn't matter.
For the last time you can't punish people for "stalling" within time limits. Otherwise you're just jumping to conclusions about the intentions of the player and are a really bad judge. I haven't seen officers handing out speeding tickets to drivers driving the limit without the intention of going anywhere.
Its perfectly legal to use your allotted time. That's why its there. It doesn't matter how you use of it or how much of it you use.