Moderator: Community Team
riskllama wrote:Koolbak wins this thread.
Dukasaur wrote:Where's your "none of the above" option?
None of those hosehead usergroups mean shit. Just places for kids your age to talk about bullshit that I finished talking about in 1972.
The only usergroup of any value is the Tournament Organizers' Guild, as the only members of any value are Tournament Organizers.
IcePack wrote:Dukasaur wrote:Where's your "none of the above" option?
None of those hosehead usergroups mean shit. Just places for kids your age to talk about bullshit that I finished talking about in 1972.
The only usergroup of any value is the Tournament Organizers' Guild, as the only members of any value are Tournament Organizers.
You mean the usergroup that had no posts go ages on end?
Dukasaur wrote:saxitoxin wrote:taking medical advice from this creature; a morbidly obese man who is 100% convinced he willed himself into becoming a woman.
Your obsession with mrswdk is really sad.
ConfederateSS wrote:Just because people are idiots... Doesn't make them wrong.
Army of GOD wrote:reminder that if you're not in all four of these usergroups you are not considered a cool person
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
riskllama wrote:quit your job.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
Bernie Sanders wrote:I wouldn't belong to any club, that would have me as a member.
Metsfanmax wrote:Bernie Sanders wrote:I wouldn't belong to any club, that would have me as a member.
And you'll never be invited to one if you quote people without attribution and try to pass it off as your own.
Dukasaur wrote:The only usergroup of any value is the Tournament Organizers' Guild, as the only members of any value are Tournament Organizers.
saxitoxin wrote:Serbia is a RUDE DUDE
may not be a PRUDE, but he's gotta 'TUDE
might not be LEWD, but he's gonna get BOOED
RUDE
Serbia wrote:Dukasaur wrote:The only usergroup of any value is the Tournament Organizers' Guild, as the only members of any value are Tournament Organizers.
That usergroup became useless when your glorious owner started actively oppressing tournament organizers by building up his own automated tournaments through piss poor efforts and not listening to the Guild when they attempted to offer constructive criticism.
Dukasaur wrote:Autotournaments have made mega-events like the Olympics and the Great War possible.
riskllama wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:Bernie Sanders wrote:I wouldn't belong to any club, that would have me as a member.
And you'll never be invited to one if you quote people without attribution and try to pass it off as your own.
strike 2, bernard.
saxitoxin wrote:Army of GOD wrote:reminder that if you're not in all four of these usergroups you are not considered a cool person
I'm getting really sick of this moving target of what constitutes cool. First I'm supposed to post in this thread, then I'm supposed to shove stuff in DDS' ass. now I have to belong to a bunch of usergroups. I've already invested so much time putting posts in cool threads, and putting stuff inside DDS, I hardly have time to start joining user groups too.
Dukasaur wrote:saxitoxin wrote:taking medical advice from this creature; a morbidly obese man who is 100% convinced he willed himself into becoming a woman.
Your obsession with mrswdk is really sad.
ConfederateSS wrote:Just because people are idiots... Doesn't make them wrong.
Serbia wrote:Dukasaur wrote:The only usergroup of any value is the Tournament Organizers' Guild, as the only members of any value are Tournament Organizers.
That usergroup became useless when your glorious owner started actively oppressing tournament organizers by building up his own automated tournaments through piss poor efforts and not listening to the Guild when they attempted to offer constructive criticism.
On topic - in it's time, McGill was tops. It's the original, was the most active, and was where I went first before any other forum. Ran it's course, got stale, and kinda bounced between Community and Anal for a minute, but they never truly touched McGill. Currently it's the PL. McGill has evolved since it's inception, but is still the place to be right now.
nietzsche wrote:Y'all want a single say f*ck that. f*ck that, f*ck that.
Dukasaur wrote:Serbia wrote:Dukasaur wrote:The only usergroup of any value is the Tournament Organizers' Guild, as the only members of any value are Tournament Organizers.
That usergroup became useless when your glorious owner started actively oppressing tournament organizers by building up his own automated tournaments through piss poor efforts and not listening to the Guild when they attempted to offer constructive criticism.
He's a poor listener; I'll grant you that one. The rest of what you said is not true.
- Autotournaments have not destroyed the world of community tournaments. They did initially bleed off some of the market, but the community tournament world did not crumble. It's smaller now, as is everything else on CC, but it still has plenty of aficionados, and while quantity of community tournaments has gone down, quality has at least stayed the same and possibly gone up. The community tournament world is quite healthy and a lot of people have fun there.
- The early autotournaments were clumsy, but they have gotten better over time. They still have some serious limitations, but step by step they get more sophisticated as time goes on.
- Autotournaments have made mega-events like the Olympics and the Great War possible. There's no way those could be done with the old ways of doing things. Remember what used to be considered large tournament series, things like Capture the Flag? Remember how it used to struggle, trying to find new organizers to take on some of the work load? Remember how it used to drag on for years, until very few could remember what it was about and even fewer cared? The Olympics is easily five times the size of Capture the Flag and the Great War is easily fifty times the size. With automation, we don't struggle to find organizers to do the enormous amount of work that would entail. There's a fair bit of work up front, writing and coding, but once the tourney is launched it pretty much runs itself. The players don't forget about the tourney, waiting for the organizer to send out the next round. As soon as a round is over, the system sends the next round within an hour. The first year of the Olympics, we actually did have a mixture of autos and community tournaments. The autos were all over by the end of September, and all kinds of people were still excited about their score in the Olympics and actively talking about them. Then, the community-run tournaments dragged on until February, and by then nobody cared. When we announced the final result, it fell flat. That's why in 2015 the Olympics went all-auto.
- That being said, there's still lots of room for community tournaments. For people who want to do tourneys with unorthodox scoring rules and major creative components, the manually-run tournament is still the way to go.
- In summary, despite all kinds of predictions of doom and gloom, autoutournaments have not spelled the death of the community tournament. The two co-exist side-by-side, and both are still quite busy. And no, the Guild is not irrelevant. Though it may not be highly active, you can still go there when you want help or advice with something or need to find someone to do a rescue. Recently we had a TO vanish; all 12 of his abandoned tournaments were successfully rescued thanks to Guild members.
BoganGod wrote:Dukasaur wrote:Serbia wrote:Dukasaur wrote:The only usergroup of any value is the Tournament Organizers' Guild, as the only members of any value are Tournament Organizers.
That usergroup became useless when your glorious owner started actively oppressing tournament organizers by building up his own automated tournaments through piss poor efforts and not listening to the Guild when they attempted to offer constructive criticism.
He's a poor listener; I'll grant you that one. The rest of what you said is not true.
- Autotournaments have not destroyed the world of community tournaments. They did initially bleed off some of the market, but the community tournament world did not crumble. It's smaller now, as is everything else on CC, but it still has plenty of aficionados, and while quantity of community tournaments has gone down, quality has at least stayed the same and possibly gone up. The community tournament world is quite healthy and a lot of people have fun there.
- The early autotournaments were clumsy, but they have gotten better over time. They still have some serious limitations, but step by step they get more sophisticated as time goes on.
- Autotournaments have made mega-events like the Olympics and the Great War possible. There's no way those could be done with the old ways of doing things. Remember what used to be considered large tournament series, things like Capture the Flag? Remember how it used to struggle, trying to find new organizers to take on some of the work load? Remember how it used to drag on for years, until very few could remember what it was about and even fewer cared? The Olympics is easily five times the size of Capture the Flag and the Great War is easily fifty times the size. With automation, we don't struggle to find organizers to do the enormous amount of work that would entail. There's a fair bit of work up front, writing and coding, but once the tourney is launched it pretty much runs itself. The players don't forget about the tourney, waiting for the organizer to send out the next round. As soon as a round is over, the system sends the next round within an hour. The first year of the Olympics, we actually did have a mixture of autos and community tournaments. The autos were all over by the end of September, and all kinds of people were still excited about their score in the Olympics and actively talking about them. Then, the community-run tournaments dragged on until February, and by then nobody cared. When we announced the final result, it fell flat. That's why in 2015 the Olympics went all-auto.
- That being said, there's still lots of room for community tournaments. For people who want to do tourneys with unorthodox scoring rules and major creative components, the manually-run tournament is still the way to go.
- In summary, despite all kinds of predictions of doom and gloom, autoutournaments have not spelled the death of the community tournament. The two co-exist side-by-side, and both are still quite busy. And no, the Guild is not irrelevant. Though it may not be highly active, you can still go there when you want help or advice with something or need to find someone to do a rescue. Recently we had a TO vanish; all 12 of his abandoned tournaments were successfully rescued thanks to Guild members.
The lady doth protest too much. Dino tot, bitch please be putting the crack pipe down. People matter. Simple concept.
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