I'd ask you what you do to avoid double fails, but by doing so it might give scum a standard to work off of.
yeah I'm not answering that question right now. I'd be happy to discuss it post-game like I did privately last time but I'm not shooting myself in the foot on the off-chance that someone's actually bad enough at this to fall for the trap.
What ties they can win? Given that this is my day 1 strategy only, I don't see how them knowing my vote in advance helps them win ties.
there's six people who aren't you. if those six split 3-3, you're the deciding vote, and you've told everyone exactly what your vote will be on every possible team.
But you have to eventually pass some sort of team and if everyone uses that logic you just end up having to accept the final person's proposal. You learn more from people electing day 1 teams made of other people than from making teams involving themselves.
this premise is only true if you start from the assumption that everyone should vote down every team they're not involved in, which is the exact stance I'm currently arguing against.
I don't think lying is generally a good idea for town, but I think there are probably situations where lying has helped town before, even if overall the strategy is sub-optimal. I like to operate under the assumption that everyone knows what they're doing, but that's not always the case.
sure, there's times where lying has helped. but there's a lot more potential for scum to abuse the loophole if they get it, so the net benefit for the town is towards not lying, ever. in some extreme cases you may have to, but if it comes to light you'd better have a damn good explanation. but as a rule, if someone here claims their vote is one thing and it turns out to be different, I am going to assume they are a spy trying to manipulate things because that is a much more powerful play than petty town deception, and I recommend everyone else assume that too. (note, of course, that that's different from saying you're voting one way, then being convinced over the course of discussion and changing it.)