Pariah Devalis, on 22 August 2015 - 09:36 AM, said:
Unfortunately, that would shift it towards toxic use. A new player may have a terrible rating, but they may want to learn and be capable of learning. However, with a T4/5 tag forced on them, they might get unfairly blasted by teammates and, as a result, not even bother and quit the game due to toxic community members.
I say make it opt in. If you want to show your tier, do so. If you don't want to, don't. Frankly, I am curious for curiosity's sake alone as to my tier.
Seems like we're looking at this from opposite sides so I'll clarify a bit - I'm looking to have the tiers displayed so that the toxic players are easily ignored. This is coming from my experience with the loud ones as described in my post you replied to... Strictly from what I've seen in-game the majority of the toxic players are swimming around the bottom of the barrel.
That being said I would also like the PSR to be publicly displayed so that I can figure out who to trust and who to avoid. For example, let's say I'm following a friendly assault mech around the map, providing ECM or fire support, whatever context you want. The PSR isn't displayed so I follow him to my death because it turns out he's T5 with a pair that clank - while I'd be happy he's not playing scared, I'd be unhappy that I made the choice to follow him assuming he could hold his own and that the two of us would be able to do some serious damage together. On the other side of it, if it's publicly displayed and I see a higher tier player moving up to make a push or going around for a flanking maneuver, I'll be comfortable in my decision to follow up on him because his ranking is (hopefully) a good indicator that he has a clue about how to play the game. Others in this thread have addressed this, I just can't find their actual posts in all these comments.
And whether PSR is publicly displayed or not, toxic players will still be just that.
Edit: and regarding your statement about newbies getting blasted - if their tier rating is displayed, reasonable players should know not to expect too much from them. They are still learning to play the game, after all. It should be assumed that the toxic players you're referring to are unreasonable and that they're the very vocal minority, making it seem like there's more of them than is actually the case.
Edited by 0111101, 22 August 2015 - 10:34 AM.