Bud Crue, on 26 September 2016 - 06:06 AM, said:
Yes, but Yellonet's OP is trying to get to a comparison based on actual data. Any quantitative comparison of performance should account for those things that you point to as potentially making a mech OP...at least as far as establishing an average performance baseline value(s). It is our inability to know the full scope of the data that makes up those baselines (because PGI doesn't share) which makes us have to fall back to our subjective views of what is OP and what is not. Alas, unless we know everything, we can only make assumptions based on incomplete data and our own subjective experiences.
Which brings us back to the features you list in your post.
To our subjective point of view a mech having all those features is going to be OP over ANY other mech lacking even one. Only real data provided by PGI can show us otherwise, and we just don't have it, not even with the leader boards.
I don't think you need quantitative data to make a good case a mech is OP or at least superior to other offerings. I predicted well before the KDK came out that it would obsolete the DWF because it has all the strengths of the DWF with none of the weaknesses and I was 100% right (and I definitely wasn't the only one saying this).
But we do also have some qualitative data we can look at, not as much as PGI, but the results of tournaments as well as personal stats can give you a good idea what is going on. In the Weight of the World tournament of the top 20 assault players 16 had the most contribution from the KDK with 3 DWFs and 1 KGC rounding out the leaderboard. Then there are personal stats, I ran the 4x CUAC10 on the DWF for a long time before I put it on the KDK3 but my stats in the DWF were never nearly as good as the KDK3, which had nearly twice the w/l and KDR.
I would love to be able to slice and dice PGI's data but I don't think it is necessary to do that to know which mechs are dominant and which are not doing well. I would also point to the rescale that screwed most lights as a case study in how using quantitative data without any regard for qualitative results can backfire.