Sunday, December 26, 2010

The Top 12 Misconceptions About Win/Loss Tourneys; Part III

by SandWyrm


This is the final post in this series. You can find Part I here, and Part 2 here.


Objection 7: "You'd Need 5+ Rounds To Do W/L Properly!"

Yes, you will. Get over it. That's what it takes to do a proper competitive event. So either do enough rounds for an overall winner, or reward all of your undefeated players equally at the end of the day.



Objection 8: How Do You Handle Ties Within A Game?

You do everything possible to make sure that a game can't be tied.

Professional team sports have overtime. In 40K you break ties by designing primary, secondary, and tertiary objectives. If the players tie on the primary, you go to the secondary. If they tie on the secondary, you go to the tertiary. If somehow (very unlikely!) they tie on the tertiary, you flip a coin or play rock, paper, scissors for it.

As an example: You design a capture and control mission with 3 objectives instead of 2, to discourage ties on the primary. As a secondary, you use table quarters. As the tertiary, you go with straight victory points.

The point is to design the mission to reduce the likelihood of ties. GW's default missions encourage ties, but that's not what you want at a competitive event.



Objection 9: You're One Of Those "Every Kid Gets A Trophy" Types, Aren't You?

Absolutely not. Having a single undefeated winner at the end of the day is my preferred outcome. But if that's not possible then I consider it the lesser evil to simply reward all of the undefeated players instead of ranking them by luck-of-the-draw. To me, that destroys the competitive credibility of the event.

As for "Best Overall" or the random prizes... I support these because they make for a better event while taking nothing away from the undefeated winner. Better/fun events attract more casually competitive players, which grows the competitive community as a whole. Which I consider to be a good thing. We need to be attracting and keeping the casually competitive players because they're the serious competitive players of tomorrow. Without them the community will die.



Objection 10: Tournaments Shouldn't Have To Cater To New Players.

Simple question: If we don't look after the new players, where will we get the good competitive players of tomorrow? If we beat all the baby seals senseless, who will help us grow the hobby?



Objection 11: What's Wrong With Newbies Being Crushed?

This:


http://www.belloflostsouls.net/2010/12/40k-are-tournaments-all-about-winning.html#disqus_thread

Seriously, read the article and all it's comments. Notice the butt-hurt? THAT's what happens when newbies get mercilessly crushed at tournaments. A large percentage of them will never come back. Many of those that never come back will also become vehemently anti-tourney. So much so that they will bad-mouth all competitive events. Driving new people away from both Tournaments and the hobby itself.



Objection 12: People Who Don't Win In The First Few Rounds Will Just Leave!

People leave now.

At the 'Ard Boyz Semi-finals that I attended this year, a third to one-half of the players left before the final round. Why? Because only the first place player got the free army. There were no other prizes except 2nd and 3rd place tickets to the finals in Chicago. Where the prizes (for some unfathomable reason) aren't nearly as good as in the Semis. So anyone who didn't pull one-sided seal beatings for their first 2 rounds had no real incentive to stay.

To counter this, tournaments (of all kinds) should offer other prizes in addition to the one for Best General. MVBrandt's example with the NOVA is a good one. He gave out a best overall (Renaissance Man), as well as a lot of random door prizes. Tickets for those random prizes were given out according to game results. Losers got more tickets, and therefore more chances to walk away with something at the end of the day.


Hence, even losers have a reason to stick around.

3 comments:

  1. Great in all aspects Sandwyrm. I will add if you want to run a 1 day tourney, then the 2 undefeated is acceptable in my opinion. As I have had to share, and normally don't like to, am OK with this concept.

    Can't wait to get back in town to play a few games. I am looking to bust some heads. Anyone interested? :)

    ReplyDelete
  2. You know, I haven't met a competitive player yet that has a problem with sharing. I think that the concept and it fairness are clear.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Wow, I am not sure how my Son's name got on there. But I am coming back in town tomorrow and looking for some great games.

    Spag

    ReplyDelete

out dang bot!

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