"The league rules sometimes require subjective interpretation by league officials. As such, any squad that is invited to play in this league understands that all decisions are final. Please consider this carefully before deciding to participate in this league."
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I think that adding this rule would be a good addition to the rulebook. On the other side of things, It would not quell the whining. In addition to the whining, its kinda hard to just say "well, we have no better reason to tell you why things blatently went against the rules, better luck next season."1:Ammunative> you should take a break from the forums
1:Ammunative> lol
1:Zingy> lol agreed
1:Zingy> i think things are getting too tense
1:Ammunative> get yourself banned for a while
1:Ammunative> itll be good for ya
1:Zingy> i'll just pretend sk8 sent out a hitman to take me out, so i ahve to lay low for a while
1:Zingy> hide in my e-Cave
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Originally posted by Ephemeral"The league rules sometimes require subjective interpretation by league officials. As such, any squad that is invited to play in this league understands that all decisions are final. Please consider this carefully before deciding to participate in this league."I'm just a middle-aged, middle-eastern camel herdin' man
I got a 2 bedroom cave here in North Afghanistan
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Originally posted by AerinWithout rules and the enforcement of rules, there might as well be no league. Everything will just be chaotic. Thanks for the idiotic suggestion.
But thanks for your opinion, it was very thoughtful.
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..well yeah, but most people understood how to read the TWL rules. Every single appeal that has been filed this season pretty much thats caused any controversy has been backed up by the rules: whether or not the ops followed them was an entirely different story. The whining was enough in the quarter-finals for thme to do something, but not for ours or warpaths in the season.I'm just a middle-aged, middle-eastern camel herdin' man
I got a 2 bedroom cave here in North Afghanistan
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I believe this used to be in the preamble/mission statement part of the rules. I guess someone took it out. I think it's a good idea although I don't like the way you worded it.Epinephrine's History of Trench Wars:
www.geocities.com/epinephrine.rm
My anime blog:
www.animeslice.com
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Originally posted by EphemeralI didn't say or imply that there shouldn't be rules. I am suggesting putting in writing the obvious, which is 'shit happens' and that everyone is invited to be in the league. The rules do state that it is a privilege, not a right. It seems that many people are NOW standing up and bitching about the way the rules have been implmented. Wouldn’t it have carry more weight if people had stood up and asked for clarification or more detailed rules before the seaosn started?
But thanks for your opinion, it was very thoughtful.
Ya, I understood that you didn't actually say there shouldn't be any rules, but what you said about 'subjective interpretations' basically nullifies the rules. Therefore, if we were to use your suggestion and turn it into a rule, we may as well scrap everything altogether and rely on the TWL ops for a final answer on what's right and what's wrong; and I'll bet you a nickel that TWL will crumble because of it.
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Aren't rules open to subjective interpretations in other areas? Such as the strike zone in baseball? Or offsides calls in soccer? And that's just in sports. You can find even more examples in the legal system. If those examples are too far an analogy from TW for you, look at how teamkills are handled. Subjective interpretations of rules happen in all fields.
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Originally posted by Troll KingAren't rules open to subjective interpretations in other areas? Such as the strike zone in baseball? Or offsides calls in soccer? And that's just in sports. You can find even more examples in the legal system. If those examples are too far an analogy from TW for you, look at how teamkills are handled. Subjective interpretations of rules happen in all fields.
Let's take the baseball example: if the ball is outside of the strike zone, it's outside of the strike zone. There's really little subjectivity to it (especially now where it's computerized, you can even interactively see where the balls hit inside the strike-zone on the MLB website).
Subjectivity eliminates a lot of the legitimacy of the rules particularly because it varies from one person to another. Your host of a TWL game might think X is not good, but another host would not have a problem with it. So why should one team be penalized for just getting the wrong host? Those are the kinds of problems that get created when the rules are no longer black & white.CAPS LOCK IS CRUISE CONTROL FOR COOL
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Originally posted by ZingyAs soon as rules become "subjective" they really aren't rules anymore because there are no strict guidlines. The dictionary says that rules are "a prescribed guide for conduct or action". If rules become subjective, they are no longer "prescribed" (chosen ahead of time) anymore. Just my opinion, like most things this is definitely open to interpretation.
Let's take the baseball example: if the ball is outside of the strike zone, it's outside of the strike zone. There's really little subjectivity to it (especially now where it's computerized, you can even interactively see where the balls hit inside the strike-zone on the MLB website).
Subjectivity eliminates a lot of the legitimacy of the rules particularly because it varies from one person to another. Your host of a TWL game might think X is not good, but another host would not have a problem with it. So why should one team be penalized for just getting the wrong host? Those are the kinds of problems that get created when the rules are no longer black & white.Last edited by Kolar; 07-27-2006, 04:18 AM.
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Originally posted by Kolarif the host makes a bad call or decides to run the game when the bots die you have the chance to have a TWL Op review it.
(without the subjectivity clause)
Edit: Maybe I misinterpreted Ephemeral's suggestion for the new rule. The way he wrote it, it sounded like it was doing away with the appeal process because it mentions that "all decisions are final". A clause at the beginning of the rules saying that all squads agree to abide by the rules by joining TWL could work, but by adding pharses like "all decisions are final" without clarifying what decisions it is referring to (in-game decisions or appeal decisions? it doesn't specifiy) could leave loopholes for squads.Last edited by Zingy; 07-27-2006, 04:26 AM.CAPS LOCK IS CRUISE CONTROL FOR COOL
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Originally posted by ZingySo how is that different from how things are now?
(without the subjectivity clause)
Edit: No I believe the idea he was trying to get across was that the TWL Ops are not going to give you an 100%, clear, unbias decision 100% of the time (no one can) but when you accept the invitation you must accept their final decision once you appeal an action taken during a game. This is already the way TWL works. Eph like me and a lot of other people feel that a majority of squads entering into TWL do not know this or believe this is the league they signed up for.Last edited by Kolar; 07-27-2006, 04:43 AM.
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Do you even watch baseball? A strike from one umpire may not necessarily be a strike for another. Some are known for having small strike zones, others are known for calling high strikes. The rules are laid out, but the umpires still have to make the calls subjectively. Even when they make the wrong calls, they won't change their original calls. It has always been like that in baseball and it hasn't threatened the "legitimacy of the rules" there.
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