Posted by jaisonline on 1/12/2011 3:25:00 PM (view original):
I am sorta against having 2 or more teams in one world. Why ? It is just way to easy to cheat during recruiting w/ FSS
For example, I coach a D1 Prov school in Tark. My dad coaches a D2 school also in Tark (I help him). note: I have informed tech support upfront when my father started playing HD in Tark about us having two teams in the same world
If either one of us were cheaters, I (or he) can easily use my Prov FSS account (since I have ample money in D1 to buy FSS states) to scout D2 players regardless of distance. That would put him at a huge advantage over his D2 peers. It is so easy to do (login to 1 account using Firefox and the other using IE. Then align the windows). It is just too tempting...
I assume it comes down to putting trust in fellow coaches that what I typed above isn't done.
is it too tempting? it really seems to me to be a lot less appealing than potential modes of cheating we live with that can exist in so many other places.
for example, i can stack a deck of cards. not exceptionally, but enough to make a pretty major impact on the outcome of the game. i like to play spades and bridge, high skill games, for no money with friends. winning these games is great - out thinking your opponent is the draw. but to win by cheating would basically mean all you did right was stack the deck well, and you lose the thrill of strategy. at least i do, i assume that is true for most people?
a more compelling example is when people play poker for money. unless you are at a casino, dealership changes hands - sure, if you cheated every hand, you would get caught. but twice over a few hours is all it takes to dramatically change the expected value of the game. everyone who plays poker, outside a casino, accepts this possibility of cheating. yet we all take the same leap of faith - the people we are playing with are not going to try to cheat us - even though the premise of the game rests on tricking your opponents, lying to them, etc. sometimes they may all be friends, but as any semi regular poker player will tell you, that is definitely not always the case. keeping the quantity of money involved low helps your chances, but even in small money games you can have 50 or 100 dollar pots.
i guess technically there is money involved in HD - people get back credits and other bullshit. but i doubt any person is playing for the money. i mean its just not even close to worth it. so to me, the FSS case is more similar to playing a strategy game like spades or bridge. i can't imagine how that would be fun, to play a game purely for strategy and then cheat to win - after you get over any possible initial thrill of cheating and getting away with it (with stacking a deck, this thrill certainly exists, but with sharing FSS data, i am skeptical it exists). but anyway my point is i don't see how this is just too tempting when you compare it to real life cases where the opportunity is so often present to cheat.
1/12/2011 4:00 PM (edited)