Aggravated Assault Mech, on 19 July 2017 - 08:38 PM, said:
If you can't see the difference between professional play in front of an audience for money, and play for pleasure at home, then you really have no place to talk about "societal norms of human competition". It suffices to say that human relations are significantly more nuanced than just shaking hands.
The fact that you think good sportsmanship is different if you are getting paid versus when you are not says all we need to know about you.
Quote
It's a turn of phrase. Like I said I'd defer to the loser. Maybe direct this comment to someone that just GGs habitually?
No, you claimed that you congratulate players on "well fought" matches. How exactly do you determine what is and is not a "well fought" match between complete strangers? Who are you to decide what is "well fought" versus "poorly fought" for someone else? This is especially arrogant considering you can't actually sit back and watch the entire match unfold. All you see is what's outside your cockpit and the final score.
A habitual "gg" is not an attempt to claim that the opponents fought well. That's the whole point of the this thread!
Quote
We were all friends and didn't really GG one another unless you had a close race. Reality is that it was a money-driven sport and GGing the kid in last that couldn't run on new tires all the time would have been pretty poor form. Just like MWO some things were out of the control of the participant, and camaraderie to keep the competition friendly was more important than dogmatically following rules of sportsmanship because "THOSE ARE THE NORMS!!!" The point is that you're all equal when you walk off the field and if someone is feeling salty, you do what you can to rectify that.
So, what you are saying is that there were social rules and customs that you engaged in to build camaraderie between drivers. You may not have said "good race" every time but you did engage in social norms appropriate to the context. Sounds good. Care to explain how that is at all relevant to a video game where every player has access to the same digital "tires" and "equipment?"
Quote
How is it a straw man? There are plenty of posts in this thread ridiculing people that don't like GG.
Did I say "people who hate getting a 'gg" after a match need to get thicker skins?" If I didn't say anything at all like that, why are you attributing it to me? Making stuff up about what other's say in order to knock it down rhetorically is the very definition of a strawman.
Quote
See above. MWO is a lot closer to driving through rush hour traffic than it is to a national sports league. Saying GG is at best an empty gesture and at worst just rubbing salt in a wound.
You want to equate people downloading a PvP game and spending their free time in organized matches with declared winners and losers with "driving through rush hour traffic?" Weren't you trying to claim that I was using a crap analogy?
Saying GG is a simple good sportsman behavior. Whether you think it is an "empty gesture" or "rubbing salt in" says more about your attitude towards recreational competition than it does the person using the term.