Chore ... challenge ... tomato ... tomatoe.
I don't necessarily want my games to be "easy" ... but I certainly want to know from Turn 0 the game is stacked in my favour to win. That means Monarch or a strong leader/map combo on Emperor.
I like a challenge, but not if it means the risk of having an elevated blood pressure after 15 hours of 'wasted' life. If I wanted to think that hard, I'd go back to work.
Plus, I like being able to do whatever I want and still get away with it (for the most part).
--------
Well, if the statement, "this is Monarch, so we can get away with it" is a rebuttal to the statement "well, that won't work on Emperor", then I think it's valid.
But if that's the whole argument and the initial comment, then I'd have to agree it's pretty weak.
----
I'm not really sure where the initial "this is Monarch" comment first arose, but I know where and when mine came in. It was only after Nares had made the comments I quoted
here, which seemed more like a chauvinistic affront than constructive criticism.
--------
In the end, constructive comments are welcome. But there's unfortunately nothing constructive about coming back after the fact and pointing out why the already-made decision is wrong and then subsequently dismissing the series.
There has been plenty (even an excess) of discussion before any voting or decisions have been made. At the end of each round, we've all voted, and the decisions have been made based on the discussion and those votes.
After that, pointing out all the ways the decision was wrong just isn't constructive.
----
[Especially if the best ball decision comes down to two saves,] If anybody disagrees with a best ball decision, the constructive (correct) way to make the point is to play a shadow off that #2 save to show how it was better suited.
And if it comes down to a different strategy being superior, then utilizing that strategy based off the best ball for comparison given the same set of starting circumstances is the best (and possibly only) way to effectively make that point.
The wrong way to go about making a point is to not even play off the best ball save or even the save purported superior but instead play off only your own save whilst pointing out "I'm doing better in my game".
----
Specifically related to Nares, he's an excellent player. I have no doubt about that. But I feel like if he truly wanted to make a point [for the sake of educating us] about how a particular strategy or whatever was better, he would've taken r_rolo1's Round 1 submission (the Round 2 best ball) and utilized those strategies from that save.
Had he done that, we would've had a direct and applicable comparison to our own attempts given the same set of tools to work with. Then, if he had gone on to shadow from his own save to show how pre-planning it from the start would've made it even stronger, then the comparisons he made to his game would've seemed less like boasting and more like bolstering.
But, that's not how it happened. There was no 'official' report, and many of the references he made to his game came across simply as "I'm doing better than you" and less like "let me help you do better".
--------
All that being said, the situation we found ourselves in with Nares is not entirely his fault. In fact, it's probably more our own fault!
For one, we were (are) ironing out the format and finding it hard enough just to judge the 'official' saves. So I think seeing Nares' shadow was hard to digest amidst the chaos that was
the Round 2 Bazaar.
In the future, after we've gotten the hang of reporting and comparing saves, I'm sure shadows will get the cycles they merit.
We also encourage(d) players to shadow our game. However, we had an unspoken expectation shadows wouldn't occur without (and only after) a report based on the Round's best ball save.
Since that request wasn't made clear, Nares didn't post an 'official' report and instead only shadowed his own game in Round 2. Based on our own rules and spoken requests, he did nothing wrong, but it still managed to rub some of us the wrong way and spiraled down from that point.
----
I think we should learn from this and decide just what level of shadowing (with our without official reporting) we really want and can handle.