So, when does it stop being random selection when everyone uses an objective and predictable method for voting? You are effectively ruining an entire round worth of valuable information, which is more important than ensuring you end up on a mission for that added chance of it succeeding.
voting no is ruining a round's worth of information?
I'm not saying vote no to every team you're not on. I'm saying consider the fact that, when you are not on a team as town, the odds of it being spy-less go way down. that's a really important thing to remember, and jumping down Neo's throat for bringing it up is silly.
And when was that going to happen? Most likely never, unless you get something unreliable like a double fail result. NeoSilk stated "I'm not on this mission, so the chance of there being a spy on it is too high." That would probably not change for the entirety of round 2, and I don't really see it changing for this one either.
I didn't interpret Neo's post as a literal declaration that they wouldn't vote for any team they weren't on (although, again, Rubik made
exactly that declaration day 1 and Garren didn't say anything.) just that, given their position, the team looked too likely to be scummy.
Maybe he didn't see the need since someone else (me) addressed it the first time. I think you are the one making a big deal out of it.
I'm sorry, what? I responded briefly to Garren's post, and have answered you when you asked direct questions of me. please don't try to paint me as some zealot here for being willing to respond when you ask me things.
eh. That feels more like Garren being Garren, and I haven't even played a game with him. I can see the comment as unnecessary, but I see it more as a snide remark than some strawman argument or whatever, probably because I could be prone to do the same, since I find the proposition ridiculous.
why is it ridiculous? I know you're capable of basic math, so it's not that you don't recognize that a 3-person team you're on as town is four times more likely to be safe than one you're not on. so what's ridiculous about being cautious about teams you're not on?
Are you not capable of justifying your actions without telegraphing what you will do for the next five rounds? Votes carry more weight than words to me. If everyone is going around telling people how they will vote, you're more or less saying "this mission is going to go through, so you can safely reject it to look more favorable", "everyone else will reject it, if you accept it you will look scummy when it fails", "this mission is not going through if you help reject it", "the way you vote can make it seem like you are allied with certain people" or whatever other options are out there. Which is why I didn't want to state my agenda before the end of round 1.
if words don't matter why are you answering me? if the optimal strategy is victory through sheer vote analysis, what purpose does engaging in discussion have?
the answer is that vote analysis by itself is shoddy. for instance, let's look at day 1. Garren and I always voted yes. were we being yes-men? maybe. but note that either Garren or Neo was included on every one of the missions we voted yes for, so maybe we just wanted them. perhaps the scum team is Garren, Neo, and myself? or perhaps it's Garren and Neo, and I was just being a yes-man? or it could be me, Neo, and Zinger, and Garren was just tagging along. or it could not be Neo, and Garrenscum's votes could be for themself, Nik, and you. or maybe it's me, you, and Nik, and I just voted yes on 1.4 because I'd established a pattern and was stuck in it. all of those are valid theories, and the only way to parse them out is to examine how the involved people interact. we can wait until we have enough votes to really make something, but by that point we'll be buried, so we need to look at people. right now I see you leaping weirdly to Garren's defense, which helps cement my belief that it's the Garren-Mown-Nik trio, especially since Nik's nos on 1.2 and 1.3 were both defaults that they claim were accidents. Garren-Mown-Neo is also a possibility.
and yes I know that oh my god there's no way Mownscum would invite Garrenscum on a mission, but that's bull. as I've said so many times, the double-fail isn't a thing that can actually happen if people play anything close to intelligently, and here they'd even have options to bounce back from it thanks to the third spy and the scapegoat in Zinger. it'd be bad but it wouldn't be game-ending, and, again, it wouldn't actually happen.