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Personally, I do the following...if it's my first game with someone, and they're completely silent, they get a 4 for "attitude". If it's the second game with them and they already have the 4, then it moves to a 3. And so forth...losing one point for each "silent game". If they do speak (in a positive way) in a game, then it gets bumped up 1 also.tzor wrote:It seems a lot of people (OK it’s only been two) have been upset at the way I leave ratings. Perhaps it is me, but I have found that almost all of my games have no chat whatsoever. I always at the very least start off with a “Good Luck” and end with a “Great Game.” A few of the players will respond in turn but that’s the extent of the conversation.
According to the “Instructions” attitude, “Covers behaviour in chat, foul language, sore losers, gracious winners, ‘great chatters!’, whining about luck, etc...” Therefore if there was no chat at all in the game, how can I rate the player? And since a zero score means “no score” (as opposed to 1 = Bad and 5 = Excellent) is this not the most logical response when there is no chat whatsoever and no way to determine the player’s attitude?
I may be wrong, but I may be right. Am I wrong here?
Thats another big reason why i do not do it if i play a player who i had a lot of fun i and remember them then yes i do leave a good rating. but since i got the medal i only feel like those that leave an impression on me should be rated good or badMetsfanmax wrote:Yes. Leaving no rating is absolutely better than helping the rating system inflation by leaving 5's all around for no reason. I wish people would realize this
Obviously freemiums try and rate as many people for the medal (which i guess is why the medal is in place..), after people have gold I'm sure the ratings slow down for everybody.Zemljanin wrote:It seems that many players feel themselves somehow obligated to rate everyone they play against... Why?
You should rate somebody if s/he made particularly good or bad impression. If you don't have any meaningful (good or bad) information about some player and you rate him anyway - it's a kind of spam, IMHO. (Especially if you don't give him all fives)
drunkmonkey wrote:I'm filing a C&A report right now. Its nice because they have a drop-down for "jefjef".
I disagree.Leehar wrote:I usually do say 'Hi, and GL' at the start of most games, but you must realize when you're playing over 100 games, it becomes difficult to do that in every single game...

Evil Semp wrote:I disagree.Leehar wrote:I usually do say 'Hi, and GL' at the start of most games, but you must realize when you're playing over 100 games, it becomes difficult to do that in every single game...
drunkmonkey wrote:I'm filing a C&A report right now. Its nice because they have a drop-down for "jefjef".
I agree. With your disagreement.Evil Semp wrote:I disagree.Leehar wrote:I usually do say 'Hi, and GL' at the start of most games, but you must realize when you're playing over 100 games, it becomes difficult to do that in every single game...
This is actually true, because even if you are a slowpoke at typing, "hi and gl" should not take more than 5 seconds to type.Evil Semp wrote:I disagree.Leehar wrote:I usually do say 'Hi, and GL' at the start of most games, but you must realize when you're playing over 100 games, it becomes difficult to do that in every single game...
TheSaxlad wrote:The Dice suck a lot of the time.
And if they dont suck then they blow.
I do the same targetman. I don't leave a rating unless they leave an impression either waytargetman377 wrote:Thats another big reason why i do not do it if i play a player who i had a lot of fun i and remember them then yes i do leave a good rating. but since i got the medal i only feel like those that leave an impression on me should be rated good or badMetsfanmax wrote:Yes. Leaving no rating is absolutely better than helping the rating system inflation by leaving 5's all around for no reason. I wish people would realize this
Things gobble my mind too.army of nobunaga wrote:MAny things boggle my mind.

You miss the point; 0 is not a "bad" rating it is "no rating." A better example is when you are completing a customer sastifaction survey on a web store that was, in every way, flawless. You come across the following question: "How did customer service handle your problem?" Well I never had a problem and never asked customer service to handle the problem I didn't have so I give it a "no rating."army of nobunaga wrote:It pisses me off when mcdonalds only gives me one syrup in the mornings with the pancakes.
And I dont even like syrup.. its just the point. I give mcDonalds a big friggin 0 for attitude here in Reynosa MX...

It is a concept known as "manners" or "good sportmanship". Like if two athletes are preparing for a competition, they may well wish each other good luck without implying that they work any less hard towards winning the race themselves.Metsfanmax wrote:I don't say "good luck," because I don't want my opponent to have good luck. I can't believe that the rest of y'all actually do.

here let me play them i will join every game of theres until there a the last player on the scoreboardtzor wrote:It seems a lot of people (OK it’s only been two) have been upset at the way I leave ratings. Perhaps it is me, but I have found that almost all of my games have no chat whatsoever. I always at the very least start off with a “Good Luck” and end with a “Great Game.” A few of the players will respond in turn but that’s the extent of the conversation.
According to the “Instructions” attitude, “Covers behaviour in chat, foul language, sore losers, gracious winners, ‘great chatters!’, whining about luck, etc...” Therefore if there was no chat at all in the game, how can I rate the player? And since a zero score means “no score” (as opposed to 1 = Bad and 5 = Excellent) is this not the most logical response when there is no chat whatsoever and no way to determine the player’s attitude?
I may be wrong, but I may be right. Am I wrong here?

Okay, but luck isn't really a factor in athletic competitions - the person who wins is generally the most skilled competitor. So saying "good luck" isn't really a lie in that case - you want it to be a fair competition, you don't want some really unlucky thing to happen in a game of skill. But in a game principally based on chance, I don't want my opponents to get good rolls. I think that good manners implies not lying to your opponent...natty_dread wrote:It is a concept known as "manners" or "good sportmanship". Like if two athletes are preparing for a competition, they may well wish each other good luck without implying that they work any less hard towards winning the race themselves.Metsfanmax wrote:I don't say "good luck," because I don't want my opponent to have good luck. I can't believe that the rest of y'all actually do.
I would rather loose because of the skill of the other player than win because of a very bad streak of dice by the opponent.Metsfanmax wrote:I don't say "good luck," because I don't want my opponent to have good luck. I can't believe that the rest of y'all actually do.
