I'll throw to you what you've thrown to me. Because of the nature of this game, the claims made matter. Case in point Rag and Amber claiming nontown alignments. Case in point you claiming your alignment honestly. The better question is why, when presented information people are putting out there, you wouldn't treat it for what it was at face value as opposed to disregarding it entirely. Couple onto that the actions taken (ie. Tevish and I focusing on a plan that dealt with two of the claimed nontown while pursuing a third that was based off of his reactions to me).
You've repeated your pointless talking point about how you were acting on the information you had available to you since there was hidden information. Tell me, exactly what information was available to you? Because from where I sit you had claims from people that you, apparently, were not willing to consider while also making your decisions based on extreme bias towards me (of which I showed earlier D1).
To hammer the above home, refer to Tevish. He had commented on how odd it was to not pursue lynching claimed nontown (ie. Amber and Rag). I brought this up already D1, but you seem content in your blissful ignorance that it bears bringing back up.
You willingly chose to not pursue Rag despite Rag claiming to not be town. You even made a point of saying you don't know which alignments are a threat to the town (this, despite Rag claiming the ability to kill and you still maintaining not wanting to lynch Rag). So, in my infinite wisdom, I championed your point about leashing Rag to shoot the other nontown (Amber) while we pursue someone else, and Zinger's reaction towards me (the bargaining) more than justified the focus on him.
But your bias kicked in with Zinger's personal post.
Now, this game is more than just politics. It also entails eliminating threats while working with your team if you have one (ancient egyptian is the exception here). As far as the politics goes, you were the catalyst that caused this whole scenario. While you say that I didn't make my case, I am obligated to tell you that I more than made my case. After all, Tevish was for it despite the whole not just lynching one of the claimed nontown, and that was due to
your desire to not lynch Rag. Since Tevish was on board, the case made sense, and Tevish being the logic based player he is says something concerning the approach I proposed. However, there is also something to be said about convincing a player who, and I quote,:
I guess the big issue here is one of priority. You want to remove unknown elements, I want to solve them. I also get the impression that both Rag and Amber have been honest so far, which means they don't necessarily need to die. There could very well be a way for them to join Town, and I would much rather look for something like that than kill people unnecessarily. Basically, while my priority is always to win, I will always try to let other people win with me if possible (ok, I did seriously consider going for the solo win in Crystal Skeleton, but that was a unique situation). I guess it goes back to my frustration in Spider-Man 2 when trying to convince town that I as Green Goblin was in fact not a threat. So now I tend to give third parties the chance to cooperate of they seem willing.
Queue your morbid curiosity.
But yes, there's no convincing someone who is intent on playing against their win con intentionally (as is illustrated by your own words about your approach to the game).
Now, for you to assert that I failed to convince you, yes, you are right. As I mentioned just above, it is near impossible to convince someone with a biased mindset like what you had/have. It didn't matter that, when asked why Zinger, I pointed out his response to me when I proposed a plan that removed him. It didn't matter what I said because, as I've shown, you have a bias against me that caused you to steer clear of whatever it was I was selling. Honest intent indeed. It's funny since Rag lied about her initial alignment, yet I'm the one who doesn't seem honest enough in my intent.
For the sake of the record and for the truth of the matter, no, you did not try to work with me. If anything, I tried to work off of what you wanted wrt to Rag. You set out with the intent, as illustrated in the quote composed of your own words, to not go after some people. It's a wonder why you decided on Shock in the first place since, you know, you believed he was 3p yet you were willing to lynch him instead of give him a chance to win like you did with Zinger.
And, again, no. Death may have caused me to be a day behind, but that's about the only mistake I made when trying to assess the game state. You, on the other hand, were the direct cause of town losing this because of your unwillingness to work with your team, your intentional desire to play against your team's win con, and your bias towards me. You know why I know this?
[quote=Final VC for D1]
The Final Count:
KoD: Naga, Amber, Rag, Zinger
Rag: CL
Aaarrrgh: Shock
Zinger: KoD, Tevish[/quote]
Side Note: The first page count is different from this one (JD has Tevish voting me in that one, but it hardly matters for the point being made).
The quoted vote count was the final tally the mod had at the end of D1. I know for sure that Tevish didn't bite on your proposal for Shock, as opposed to voting with me against Zinger and having Rag shoot Amber.
Rag initially was going to go along with the plan, but when the first vote count came out for D1 it had me with three votes (Naga, Amber, and Rag) so Rag opted to keep her vote on me. Throughout the day Rag made it known she'd follow town's will (more so you later on as the end of the day drew closer). Realistically, you could have had Rag move her vote from me to, say, Shock if you had been serious about not seeing a claimed townie die on your watch. You didn't bother with that though. Course, you could have also gone with the plan, and signaled to Rag to follow the proposed plan which would have assured Zinger's lynch and Amber being targeted at night by Rag.
But your priorities were elsewhere. More than likely due to your morbid curiosity.
In any event, the "wagon" on Zinger wasn't failed since it had support from a fellow person claiming to be town (thanks Tevish). That's more than I can say for your singular vote on your Shock wagon.
In any case, the point is well established by your words and actions this game. You intentionally played against your win con through multiple areas (your bias towards me, your actions that led to my lynch, and your willingness to not pursue threats to the town).
At this point, I do not believe there are enough words in the English language to string together to help me convey to you that you won't be able to convince me otherwise to your playing against your win con.
I'll leave it at that.