ScarecrowES, on 14 February 2016 - 02:04 PM, said:
I totally get what you're saying here... but we're not talking about one bad player repeatedly calling out the OP in a match... we're talking about the player being repeatedly called out by different players over many matches. Now, I tend not to bring crappy builds, and have only rarely ever received negative comments on my play, so I honestly cannot speak to being on the receiving end of negative comments in this game. BUT... generally speaking if I'd have received the same comments from multiple people, I'd tend to at least consider the veracity of those comments and make adjustments as is necessary.
I think the crux of your argument is that there's a more tactful way to "suggest" to the OP that he make a change, and that if he chooses not to make a change away from factors that negatively affect his teammates, the team should just sorta... accept that. I wholely agree with the first part, but won't agree with the second. To expect 11 people to bare the burden of the 12th is unfair.
Your argument also seems to hinge on the idea that the OP would not have fun if he played his D-DC with a different build, or if he played a similar build on a different mech. That he MUST play THIS build on THIS mech to have fun. I think this is not at all the case, as he seems to have expressed to be perfectly capable of enjoying more standard brawling Atlai. So would he suddenly have a terrible time playing MWO if he were to use a more effective Atlas build? Or playing his preferred D-DC build on a mech more suited to it? Obviously not. In this case, we're looking at a fairly arbitrary choice on the part of the OP that has a negative impact on the team and has little positive impact on his own enjoyment. One could easily argue then, and rightly so, that the OP might actually enjoy things more if he were to use more effective builds. How would be counter that argument then? By saying it's his choice to enjoy or not enjoy? It's rather circular.
If he was receiving these comments only at the end of the match, I would be more inclined to say 'consider changing the build significantly', but the fact of the matter is that most people who make these complaints do so before the build can demonstrate its capability. I would almost bet money that the OP is receiving these comments in most cases before battle even begins or early in the fight, in which case those players are basing their comments on incomplete information, if not outright assumptions.
Another issue here is that you are assuming that he is negatively impacting his teammates. Frankly, neither of us has enough information to draw an actual conclusion as to his build's impact, unless you've been dropping alongside him recently on a regular basis while he pilots it and spent much of your attention on watching him play. I am trying not to assume either way, since I lack that kind of information. As for expecting the rest of the team to help hold him up, a situation similar to what you're describing is forced on players whenever someone brings a new 'mech which they aren't certain how to use to a match. By extension, should it then be considered verboten to bring a 'mech with no efficiencies into battle? What about a build that the player hasn't tested in an actual match yet? This isn't as big a step of difference as some would claim.
I'm trying to not assume that he won't have fun if he builds his D-DC differently- but I am trying to work off the info I do have, which is that he does have fun playing his D-DC that way.
He might well enjoy playing the 'mech more with a 'more effective' build. But there's a difference between modifying a build and building something completely different, and there's a difference between 'You should change your build.' and 'You suck, you loser. What a n00b. Go back to tier 5, your brain is garbage and so is what's come out of it.' Admittedly it's not the same difference, but it is a difference, and I'm starting to get sidetracked here, hang on.
Hang on.
Okay, so.... here's the thing. He's playing his D-DC this way because he enjoys playing it with the function it currently has. He's receiving disproportionate invective from players who likely are judging based on preconceptions rather than his actual performance and utility, and is asking that people stop harangueing him about it.
The fact that he's still not radically rebuild his 'mech indicates that there's something about his current build that he finds considerable value in. That means that better progress is liable to be made by modifying the current build, which is not what he's talking about people telling him to do. He's talking about people trying to dictate, if not exactly how he should build the 'mech, what kind of build he should be using- specifically, one that is definitively not the same kind as his current build.
This tells me that he wants the Atlas to function in a manner similar to that in which it already does, and there is nothing wrong with that.
Frankly, I don't think he should be altering (or considering altering) his build because he drops alongside people who think it's a bad build and refuse to provide constructive commentary. I also don't think he should be altering (or considering altering) his build because he drops alongside people who do provide constructive commentary.
I think considering altering your 'mech build is something everyone should always be doing with every 'mech and every build. Which means that, to me, it's a completely external concern, and not actually directly relevant to the issue. Whether or not he's considering changing his build is not the point. As far as my perception, at least, it's completely extraneous.
It's the behavior of those that think he should that is the issue here, which is to say, treating him as though he were somehow wrong and bad and evil for bringing it onto the field in the first place, and that the way that they would do it is necessarily the only good, right, just way.
I don't think it's bad of him to want to have fun the way he has fun. To a certain degree, I guess he has a social responsibility to attempt to improve his 'mech, but mandating that he completely alter the way he uses it is no more reasonable or okay than mandating he never change it at all.
Frankly, given that I'm going to be starting to drive Atlas soon (in fact, Riflemen and Archers notwithstanding, they're one of the last two last chassis of the Inner Sphere 'mechs remaining for me to start earning XP on out of all those I intend to drive that currently exist in the game), I'd love to have a crack at modifying his build to make it more generally effective, but if he'd rather puzzle his own way through then that's fine also.
I think I've gotten sidetracked again.
Where was I trying to go with this?
Oh, and just because it's more effective doesn't mean it's more enjoyable, necessarily. Claiming that is based on a value of 'fun' that is not universal.
Er..... right. So.
He continues to use the 'mech the way it's built because there is value in it for him, so it is reasonable to argue on behalf of his keeping the 'mech to a similar nature of function while attempting to achieve a higher effectiveness. If there was equal value either way in terms of his play experience, then it is reasonable to expect he would have already changed the type of function. Since he hasn't, the most reasonable conclusion is that he enjoys this style of function better, and should be encouraged to improve it rather than replace it.