Moderator: Community Team

betiko wrote:Basically, i said all i have to say as i like the system the way it is. People want to change a system instead of changing the way they rate...
If you give 3s, you are basically giving a bad rate to your opponent. If he was really average, you don t give any ratings, simple as that, i guess you can figure it out by yourself why.
Rate people 5s if you enjoyed playing them, don t rate if you have not much to say, and rate 4 and bellow for people you didn t like.
Just give me 1 name, 1 player that is over/under rated. The rates give a very good idea of the opposition and i know i shouldn t play a multiplayer game with a 4.3 as he will be a jackass.
homes32 wrote:betiko wrote:Basically, i said all i have to say as i like the system the way it is. People want to change a system instead of changing the way they rate...
If you give 3s, you are basically giving a bad rate to your opponent. If he was really average, you don t give any ratings, simple as that, i guess you can figure it out by yourself why.
Rate people 5s if you enjoyed playing them, don t rate if you have not much to say, and rate 4 and bellow for people you didn t like.
Just give me 1 name, 1 player that is over/under rated. The rates give a very good idea of the opposition and i know i shouldn t play a multiplayer game with a 4.3 as he will be a jackass.
That is your opinion and interpretation. It is not however how the site instructions say the system should be used. In fact it is completely opposite. There should be no "figuring it out" as you suggest. A rating system should be simple and concise, leaving little room for people to misuse, misinterpret or question the results.
As for names, this is not the time or the place for such a discussion. As the ratings stand they are subjective to each players opinion and such discussion has little to no value in enhancing or destabilizing this suggestion.

betiko wrote:If you give 3s, you are basically giving a bad rate to your opponent. If he was really average, you don t give any ratings, simple as that, i guess you can figure it out by yourself why.

Metsfanmax wrote:betiko wrote:If you give 3s, you are basically giving a bad rate to your opponent. If he was really average, you don t give any ratings, simple as that, i guess you can figure it out by yourself why.
Which is why we should have automatic neutral ratings by default. The problem is that if everyone did in fact rate according to their opinion, then the average rating would indeed be around 3. Since the typical rating that a person leaves is straight 5s, that means they think basically every person they play is significantly above average. Which is obviously a lie. I don't know why anyone would condone such blatant lying among basically everyone who participates in that system.

IcePack wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:betiko wrote:If you give 3s, you are basically giving a bad rate to your opponent. If he was really average, you don t give any ratings, simple as that, i guess you can figure it out by yourself why.
Which is why we should have automatic neutral ratings by default. The problem is that if everyone did in fact rate according to their opinion, then the average rating would indeed be around 3. Since the typical rating that a person leaves is straight 5s, that means they think basically every person they play is significantly above average. Which is obviously a lie. I don't know why anyone would condone such blatant lying among basically everyone who participates in that system.
So instead of everyone being 4.6 - 5.0, everyone will be 2.8 - 3.2 ... dragging everyone closer to 3.0 over time due to lazy raters.**
macbone wrote:There's no way to rate someone as a 4.7 or 4.8 because that level of granularity really isn't necessary, especially for a casual site. A Likert scale 1-5 rating system is widely accepted in survey research, and I don't think CC requires more than that. Movie reviewers use 4 stars or 5 stars, which does create a bit more confusion, but readers can process it. Understanding grades on essays can be more difficult, especially when they're not supported by some kind of rubric, but if a rubric is given that clearly differentiates between scores, it's easier to understand marks. My paper got an 85, but yours got an 86? Why? Oh, ok, I got 1 mark less on grammar than you did on the grading rubric.
Edit: I know of no survey that processes unanswered responses as neutral responses, and no evaluations that do the same. I don't always rate my Amazon sellers (gasp!), and they don't automatically get some kind of neutral response. I don't see why CC should be the exception to this.
Edit D: Would changing the scale from "Bad, Below Average, Average, Above Average, Excellent" to "Terrible, Poor, Average, Good, Excellent" make a difference in ratings? No? OK, then, carry on. =)