A few words on invitationals...
This was raised elsewhere on the forum, but since I'm not letting myself comment in that particular forum any longer, I thought I would discuss it here. This is I believe the 2nd time I've taken part in a game that was mostly arranged outside of the Civ General Forum, though there have been other attempts that didn't actually result in a game. Anyway, the purpose behind this sort of game is twofold:
1. Play with players of a relatively similar skill-level to make the game more competitive and interesting.
2. Play with players who have a similar outlook on the game as you.
I can't begin to understand why anyone would frown on the first point. We encourage new players to play greens games all the time. I actually think in a lot of ways those are less helpful because a lot of times its a players first game and I think you're better off starting in an open setup - it is good for the soul to get your ass handed to you at least once. Nonetheless, the concept is sound and I've never really heard anyone complain about them. The problem is that when you make a post in the general forum looking for players of a "similar skill level to yourself" you get two issues. Firstly, people have varying ideas of what that skill level is. And secondly, invariably a few people have to jump in and tell you you're a <insulting word to someone's manhood> for wanting to restrict at the top level. So, to me, self-selecting these games is the way to go.
Now, I didn't organize this game - partly because I don't really have enough personal contacts at RB to do so anymore, after my leaving for a while and the fact that I'm generally a giant jerk - Commodore did. I didn't jump in immediately but I've got some free time and I said so long as the game was base BTS and I could find a teammate, I would play. I wouldn't have generated this field, necessarily. I don't know enough about the players to do so. But I think its pretty obvious that even if you used the absolute worst possible ranking of the players in this game, they range from T4-T6 on a hypothetical RB pyramid. That should make the game for the individual players involved a hell of a lot more competitive than the usual open field which ranges from T1-T9. It might make some of the players who want a game but didn't get an invitation a bit salty, but hell, there was just a 34 player game opened. Its unlikely another full field was going to fill up anyway.
The second point, I'm less convinced on. PBEM38 was an invitational and the behavior of players at the end of that game was enough to drive me away from RB. There's been a definite sea change at this site as it has become more multiplayer oriented and the attitude of some of the players that sort of orientation attracts is exactly the sort of behavior that I come to RB to avoid. Don't get me wrong, RB has always had asses - I'm one of them. But there's a tendency to assign differences of opinion to character flaws that I recognize from online games with kids that is precisely why I don't play a lot of online multiplayer. I'm 37 years old, on my list of things I would like to do, arguing about my manhood with college kids is not very high. Nonetheless, after the last invitational I was in went down as it did I was hesitant to sign up for this one. But ultimately, I don't plan on getting as emotionally invested in this game as I have some of my past games, so even if Thoth gifts his whole civilization to Commodore who renames all of his units to Bad Manner and blankets them around my civ pillaging roads around my cities before finally killing me off, I'm not going to let it get to me in the same way. I think I mostly managed to not take things too personally in PB16 and I hope to improve on that here.
Anyway, the basic point is that I don't need any additional games against Mackoti or SevenSpirits to know they're better players than me and I don't need any additional games against Kuro or Nakor to know I'm better players than them. It doesn't mean I won't play in open fields in the future - I very probably will - and I sure as hell don't have to prove I'm willing to do so, I've got quite a few games played against open fields including the very best players RB has to offer to show I'm plenty willing to take my lumps and find my own fun in a losing effort. But every now and then its nice to play a game you didn't lose or win on T0 and an invitational is one way to do it.
There are players I would never play against again but that has nothing to do with their skill level and everything to do with their attitude. And if self-selecting whether or not I want to hang out with people I strongly dislike because of my perception of their antics is self-indulgent, well, color me guilty as charged.
This was raised elsewhere on the forum, but since I'm not letting myself comment in that particular forum any longer, I thought I would discuss it here. This is I believe the 2nd time I've taken part in a game that was mostly arranged outside of the Civ General Forum, though there have been other attempts that didn't actually result in a game. Anyway, the purpose behind this sort of game is twofold:
1. Play with players of a relatively similar skill-level to make the game more competitive and interesting.
2. Play with players who have a similar outlook on the game as you.
I can't begin to understand why anyone would frown on the first point. We encourage new players to play greens games all the time. I actually think in a lot of ways those are less helpful because a lot of times its a players first game and I think you're better off starting in an open setup - it is good for the soul to get your ass handed to you at least once. Nonetheless, the concept is sound and I've never really heard anyone complain about them. The problem is that when you make a post in the general forum looking for players of a "similar skill level to yourself" you get two issues. Firstly, people have varying ideas of what that skill level is. And secondly, invariably a few people have to jump in and tell you you're a <insulting word to someone's manhood> for wanting to restrict at the top level. So, to me, self-selecting these games is the way to go.
Now, I didn't organize this game - partly because I don't really have enough personal contacts at RB to do so anymore, after my leaving for a while and the fact that I'm generally a giant jerk - Commodore did. I didn't jump in immediately but I've got some free time and I said so long as the game was base BTS and I could find a teammate, I would play. I wouldn't have generated this field, necessarily. I don't know enough about the players to do so. But I think its pretty obvious that even if you used the absolute worst possible ranking of the players in this game, they range from T4-T6 on a hypothetical RB pyramid. That should make the game for the individual players involved a hell of a lot more competitive than the usual open field which ranges from T1-T9. It might make some of the players who want a game but didn't get an invitation a bit salty, but hell, there was just a 34 player game opened. Its unlikely another full field was going to fill up anyway.
The second point, I'm less convinced on. PBEM38 was an invitational and the behavior of players at the end of that game was enough to drive me away from RB. There's been a definite sea change at this site as it has become more multiplayer oriented and the attitude of some of the players that sort of orientation attracts is exactly the sort of behavior that I come to RB to avoid. Don't get me wrong, RB has always had asses - I'm one of them. But there's a tendency to assign differences of opinion to character flaws that I recognize from online games with kids that is precisely why I don't play a lot of online multiplayer. I'm 37 years old, on my list of things I would like to do, arguing about my manhood with college kids is not very high. Nonetheless, after the last invitational I was in went down as it did I was hesitant to sign up for this one. But ultimately, I don't plan on getting as emotionally invested in this game as I have some of my past games, so even if Thoth gifts his whole civilization to Commodore who renames all of his units to Bad Manner and blankets them around my civ pillaging roads around my cities before finally killing me off, I'm not going to let it get to me in the same way. I think I mostly managed to not take things too personally in PB16 and I hope to improve on that here.
Anyway, the basic point is that I don't need any additional games against Mackoti or SevenSpirits to know they're better players than me and I don't need any additional games against Kuro or Nakor to know I'm better players than them. It doesn't mean I won't play in open fields in the future - I very probably will - and I sure as hell don't have to prove I'm willing to do so, I've got quite a few games played against open fields including the very best players RB has to offer to show I'm plenty willing to take my lumps and find my own fun in a losing effort. But every now and then its nice to play a game you didn't lose or win on T0 and an invitational is one way to do it.
There are players I would never play against again but that has nothing to do with their skill level and everything to do with their attitude. And if self-selecting whether or not I want to hang out with people I strongly dislike because of my perception of their antics is self-indulgent, well, color me guilty as charged.
I've got some dirt on my shoulder, can you brush it off for me?