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Nice attempt at diverting our attention away from the obtrusive smut. She's clearly giving him a footjob...Falkomagno wrote:salr15 wrote:Speaking of consequences...Falkomagno wrote:or suffer the consequences
When will you get warned for your distasteful avatar?
You are talking about yourself don't you?
What's the deal with a couple of ballet dancer
But how about if we consider chess and that other game of the titans, snap! Skill may be skill and intelligence may be intelligence, but one offers far more opportunity to exhibit the skill than the other. Therefore, while escalating and no cards may be much more similar than chess and snap!, they are surely still sufficiently different to at least question whether one form offers more opportunity to use innate intelligence than the other.KLOBBER wrote:Skill is skill, and intelligence is intelligence, and as the settings are necessarily the same for each player within each respective game, and the playing field is therefore necessarily even within each game, then the notion that gaining points consistently on one setting takes more or less skill or intelligence than on another setting is completely unscientific, is completely illogical, is completely stupid, and is is complete hogwash.

That is all definitely true.Mr Changsha wrote:But how about if we consider chess and that other game of the titans, snap! Skill may be skill and intelligence may be intelligence, but one offers far more opportunity to exhibit the skill than the other. Therefore, while escalating and no cards may be much more similar than chess and snap!, they are surely still sufficiently different to at least question whether one form offers more opportunity to use innate intelligence than the other.KLOBBER wrote:Skill is skill, and intelligence is intelligence, and as the settings are necessarily the same for each player within each respective game, and the playing field is therefore necessarily even within each game, then the notion that gaining points consistently on one setting takes more or less skill or intelligence than on another setting is completely unscientific, is completely illogical, is completely stupid, and is is complete hogwash.
So not 'completely unscientific, illogical, stupid and hogwash' then?KLOBBER wrote:That is all definitely true.Mr Changsha wrote:But how about if we consider chess and that other game of the titans, snap! Skill may be skill and intelligence may be intelligence, but one offers far more opportunity to exhibit the skill than the other. Therefore, while escalating and no cards may be much more similar than chess and snap!, they are surely still sufficiently different to at least question whether one form offers more opportunity to use innate intelligence than the other.KLOBBER wrote:Skill is skill, and intelligence is intelligence, and as the settings are necessarily the same for each player within each respective game, and the playing field is therefore necessarily even within each game, then the notion that gaining points consistently on one setting takes more or less skill or intelligence than on another setting is completely unscientific, is completely illogical, is completely stupid, and is is complete hogwash.

The previous post was. Conversely, this last one was all true.Mr Changsha wrote:So not 'completely unscientific, illogical, stupid and hogwash' then?KLOBBER wrote:That is all definitely true.Mr Changsha wrote:But how about if we consider chess and that other game of the titans, snap! Skill may be skill and intelligence may be intelligence, but one offers far more opportunity to exhibit the skill than the other. Therefore, while escalating and no cards may be much more similar than chess and snap!, they are surely still sufficiently different to at least question whether one form offers more opportunity to use innate intelligence than the other.KLOBBER wrote:Skill is skill, and intelligence is intelligence, and as the settings are necessarily the same for each player within each respective game, and the playing field is therefore necessarily even within each game, then the notion that gaining points consistently on one setting takes more or less skill or intelligence than on another setting is completely unscientific, is completely illogical, is completely stupid, and is is complete hogwash.
KLOBBER wrote:The previous post was. Conversely, this last one was all true.Mr Changsha wrote:So not 'completely unscientific, illogical, stupid and hogwash' then?KLOBBER wrote:That is all definitely true.Mr Changsha wrote:But how about if we consider chess and that other game of the titans, snap! Skill may be skill and intelligence may be intelligence, but one offers far more opportunity to exhibit the skill than the other. Therefore, while escalating and no cards may be much more similar than chess and snap!, they are surely still sufficiently different to at least question whether one form offers more opportunity to use innate intelligence than the other.KLOBBER wrote:Skill is skill, and intelligence is intelligence, and as the settings are necessarily the same for each player within each respective game, and the playing field is therefore necessarily even within each game, then the notion that gaining points consistently on one setting takes more or less skill or intelligence than on another setting is completely unscientific, is completely illogical, is completely stupid, and is is complete hogwash.
I know exactly what I have been writing about: Whether it is easier to become a captain at no cards/flat rate or escalating. I was speculating as to whether it is in fact easier to do this on escalating. You then said that I was writing crap because of your 'even playing field' principle. I then said that in fact no KLOBBER you are wrong, because the games are different, therefore one might reward intelligence more than the other, which would then suggest that it is easier to win on escalating as one's intelligence can shine more.
The point is that you derided our speculating on the issue.
You were wrong to do that.
But please carry on...
You do realize that the two posts said different things, right?

Dude, calm down.Mr Changsha wrote:...one might reward intelligence more than the other, which would then suggest that it is easier to win on escalating as one's intelligence can shine more....
You then said that I was writing crap....
KLOBBER wrote:Dude, calm down.Mr Changsha wrote:...one might reward intelligence more than the other, which would then suggest that it is easier to win on escalating as one's intelligence can shine more.
Actually, I posted something to the same effect as your above quote, even before you began posting on this subject. That is not what you said earlier, though. What you said earlier WAS unscientific, stupid, illogical hogwash, but what you said above is true.
I'm agreeing with you that one setting could possibly reward skill and intelligence to a higher degree than the other.
At least, I'm TRYING to agree with you; is that even going to be possible?
Also, I never said "crap," you brought that word into the conversation independently.
Woodruff wrote:prismsaber wrote:Finally somebody gets it.Falkomagno wrote:I just realiced what prismsaber said.![]()
Of course, that according to the concepts given by prismsaber, a scalating games are more profitable than no cards or flat games. Since he has 3971 points, that's a good criteria to know if he know was he's talking about. , at least that's enough for me.
On another note...KLOBBER, I am surprised that someone as intelligent as you puts so much effort and energy into arguably the most kiddy map on the site; Circus Maximus. Imagine the score you could reach if you put as much effort into learning a lucrative game style as you do trolling and playing little league games. When I have more free time maybe I'll even mentor you in team games if you ask nicely!
I happen to personally enjoy Circus Maximus a GREAT deal. Why? Because I don't have to worry about the stupid damn drops deciding the game. Circus Maximus is one of the few maps I feel that way about.
(So FW)KLOBBER wrote:....blah blah blah.... the notion that gaining points consistently on one setting takes more or less skill or intelligence than on another setting is completely unscientific, is completely illogical, is completely stupid, and is is complete hogwash.blah blah blah......
"Almost?"Falkomagno wrote:...almost I can not write....
I bet his opinion of your Spanish would be similar.KLOBBER wrote:"Almost?"Falkomagno wrote:...almost I can not write....
Buddy, you can not write, period!
Maybe, maybe not, but I'm not writing in Spanish, am I?Timminz wrote:I bet his opinion of your Spanish would be similar.KLOBBER wrote:"Almost?"Falkomagno wrote:...almost I can not write....
Buddy, you can not write, period!
I'd be more than happy to take your points away from you on any map you'd like, falko. <evil smile> My points are low because I play a massive number of concurrent games across almost all of the different maps and on many different settings (thanks to tournaments). Fortunately, as I've stated on many an occasion, I really don't care at all about my points, as I'm here for fun.Falkomagno wrote:And maybe that explain those huge 900 pointsWoodruff wrote:I happen to personally enjoy Circus Maximus a GREAT deal. Why? Because I don't have to worry about the stupid damn drops deciding the game. Circus Maximus is one of the few maps I feel that way about.prismsaber wrote:Finally somebody gets it.Falkomagno wrote:I just realiced what prismsaber said.![]()
Of course, that according to the concepts given by prismsaber, a scalating games are more profitable than no cards or flat games. Since he has 3971 points, that's a good criteria to know if he know was he's talking about. , at least that's enough for me.
On another note...KLOBBER, I am surprised that someone as intelligent as you puts so much effort and energy into arguably the most kiddy map on the site; Circus Maximus. Imagine the score you could reach if you put as much effort into learning a lucrative game style as you do trolling and playing little league games. When I have more free time maybe I'll even mentor you in team games if you ask nicely!![]()
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You were a sergeant at one point. Were you trash at reading the board?FabledIntegral wrote:Sergeant is still a shit rank where they are trash at reading the board. Majors can hardly read the board at a minimally decent level, although thought process actually shows.
Sergeants have to work roughly twice as hard to get points as cooks do. There's definitely a difference...FabledIntegral wrote:A sergeant is the equivalent of throwing me on a specific gimmick map and expecting me to understand all the intricacies of it. In terms of strategy, sergeant in my eyes is bottom of the barrel. Hardly differentiable to a cook.
Good day.
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
LOL! LOL! LOL!Beckytheblondie wrote:So i havent read this thread and cannot contribute much. But for some reason, whenever it see it on the forum list, I think of a porn star who finally cracked under the pressure of performing constant threesomes, when in here heart she only loved the 1 on 1 action
No, John9blue. Fabled emerged from his mother's womb a fully formed colonel, went up to brig. and then regressed back to his childhood and became a colonel again.john9blue wrote:You were a sergeant at one point. Were you trash at reading the board?FabledIntegral wrote:Sergeant is still a shit rank where they are trash at reading the board. Majors can hardly read the board at a minimally decent level, although thought process actually shows.
Sergeants have to work roughly twice as hard to get points as cooks do. There's definitely a difference...FabledIntegral wrote:A sergeant is the equivalent of throwing me on a specific gimmick map and expecting me to understand all the intricacies of it. In terms of strategy, sergeant in my eyes is bottom of the barrel. Hardly differentiable to a cook.
Good day.

That's very astute of you. Perhaps that is why I used the words, "I bet", and "would be".KLOBBER wrote:Maybe, maybe not, but I'm not writing in Spanish, am I?Timminz wrote:I bet his opinion of your Spanish would be similar.KLOBBER wrote:"Almost?"Falkomagno wrote:...almost I can not write....
Buddy, you can not write, period!
Ah, but isn't that the point? My experience has been of the steady sergeant with 1,000 games. He might not be the most daring of players, but be over-confident and he'll clean your pipes for you.jnd94 wrote:I believe what Fabled is trying to say is that to stay at sarg or below, your strategic knowledge must be limited. Not non-existent, but limited.

I would venture that the very higher ranks are generally (I'm sure there are exceptions) the ones who "limit their game", in one fashion or another.jnd94 wrote:I believe what Fabled is trying to say is that to stay at sarg or below, your strategic knowledge must be limited. Not non-existent, but limited.
To quote Judge Judy's appropriately dismissive catch phrase, "Shoulda woulda coulda."Timminz wrote:That's very astute of you. Perhaps that is why I used the words, "I bet", and "would be".KLOBBER wrote:Maybe, maybe not, but I'm not writing in Spanish, am I?Timminz wrote:I bet his opinion of your Spanish would be similar.KLOBBER wrote:"Almost?"Falkomagno wrote:...almost I can not write....
Buddy, you can not write, period!
I can attest to that. I played upwards of 110+ games on various maps with various settings and my rank was all over the place, bouncing between Private and Lieutenant. These days I play about 40-60 games active at a time and my rank varies a little bit above and below Lieutenant. If I was to play even fewer game my rank would probably rise some more, but then I wouldn't have as much fun.Mr Changsha wrote:While we can only write in generalities I think we can often say that high score = narrow game selection rather than high score = superior ability. Of course there are many exceptions to the rule, but it holds in many, many cases. Someone was criticising woodruff for being a private after 1,000 games in another thread and he retorted by saying he had 100 games on a wide variety of maps and styles. I can see why he's a private then, as I wouldn't want to set myself the challenge of playing that many varieties of the game and staying over 2,000 points. I imagine I'd drop a great deal.