Posted 07 June 2013 - 01:17 AM
So, PEEF...what you're saying is: “I want to be able to ignore the opinions of any player whose ELO score is sufficiently beneath my own, and will paste a justification on this desire by claiming that balance is different for low ELO players and thus their ideas/arguments have no real merit on the game as a whole. Because 4uck scrubs.” Is that about right? Because that's pretty much what it sounds like.
You've put together a cogent, well-reasoned and well-written argument which, nonetheless, stinks terribly of elitism, segregation, and the general oppression/dismissal of anyone whose 1337 #'s are insufficiently 1337 for any given discussion. The notion that scrubby players should talk to other scrubby players (and by implication, only other scrubby players) about scrubby problems because they have no basis for making arguments about anything else is...well, it's insulting, offensive, hurtful, and just plain incorrect. Your argument that high-level players have equally little business weighing in on issues of accessibility is a blatant piece of pandering trying to appease dumb newbies into thinking that you actually value their opinions – despite the fact that your proposal is clearly and inevitably aimed at cutting them out of any future discussions over anything of actual worth.
Stop it. Argue for your public ELO scores if you must, but don't pretend you give the faintest foggiest flip about the folks on the left-hand side of the bell curve.
Let me throw this out there, just as a thing: I am a scrubby player. I'm one of those guys that you, PEEF, claim have no business offering any sort of input into balance issues and should, instead, restrict myself solely to discussions focused around accessibility and entry-level PUG tactics. Because 4uck scrubs; their ship opinions are ship anyways, real MWO players don't want to have to wade through them.
Here's the thing, though: I know why I'm one of those scrubs you're intent on 4ucking. Namely, my aim is ship – I've spent most of my life playing console games and have only recently started really picking up PC gaming outside MMOs or other niche genres, and find that trying to aim consistently and precisely with a mouse is something of a chore. Since my gunnery sucks, I win less fights than I otherwise might – especially as my choice of rides tends towards the fast and agile rather than the slow and stable – and my numbers are thusly low.
Here's my question to you, PEEF: which portion of my lack of gunnery skills is the part that invalidates my brain? I am a highly intelligent individual (yes, I know, I am unable to claim such without sounding like a douchewhale braggart. Nothing I can do about it, just accept the premise on this one for the moment, please?) with trained logical analysis abilities and a long history with MechWarrior. I understand BattleMech customization perfectly well, I know what Piranha's trying to do with any given balance patch (if not why they're doing it. Some of their decisions are weird...), and I am generally able to offer well-reasoned insight into many issues which, according to such a nebulous thing as my ELO score, are well above my station.
As it stands now, the only way for you to dismiss what I write is to read it, even if only in part, and support or dismiss it on its own merits. With a public ELO score, similar to a public post count, you can see a new post in, say, a thread just like this, glance at the player's ELO score, note that it's lower than what you feel the floor for Valid Opinions are for the given issue, and throw the post out altogether...despite the fact that you never even read a word of it. Despite the fact that for all you know, the guy might well have a point, or some insight into the game that you don't, and that his post might well be worth paying serious attention to.
No one should get to dismiss someone else out of hand because of a number next to their name (I'm aware of the irony given my actual name. Ahem: chuckle chuckle). My ELO score does not do my thinking for me. My ELO score does not fight my battles for me. I am not my ******* ELO score. The only thing that should matter whenever I offer an opinion or a piece of feedback is what the opinion or feedback is.
As a writing teacher of mine taught once, about a close relative of this very issue: “Who am I to dare write an article on [subject]? I am what I wrote.”