Posted by zbrent716 on 1/27/2012 10:44:00 AM (view original):
Posted by tianyi7886 on 1/27/2012 10:23:00 AM (view original):
Posted by zbrent716 on 1/27/2012 8:08:00 AM (view original):
Do you think the engine actually aggregates the individual ratings into an OE or DE though? Or is that mathematical equation just something we could use to get a feel for how the engine ends up producing results based on the individual ratings?
Even if it compares individual ratings match up, how do you think the engine decides in the end of which side is ahead. Suppose the offensive player has 30point edge in ath, but 50 point deficiency in spd, 85 per, while the defender has 95 defense, how would the engine rectify this? It has to assign a weight to the various deficiencies and then aggregate all the factors to come out with a number. This final number determines the probability (shooting %) of whether the shot goes in, misses, or the player is fouled.
I'm not as certain as you that it *must* aggregate all the factors to come out with a certain number.
If that was the case, I think you'd see more instances of one or more ratings being absurdly high "covering" for a deficiency.
Take Ath, for example, which is certainly vital. A 100 Ath, particularly if weighted more heavily, might do a fantastic job of covering for a deficiency in speed. While I think it can to some extent, I think there is also a level for speed below which a player's effectiveness is much more harshly punished, even if he has great ratings at everything else.
I not sure the 100 Ath, 100 Def, 100 SB, 5 Spd would be effective at stopping a reasonably talented 75 SPD player, even though he might have good "aggregate" ratings.
I never said that they weigh every rating the same. With the engine geared toward ath/spd, of course that wouldn't hold. If ath gets a value of 0.25 and spd a value of 0.22, while def gets 0.08 and SB gets 0.02, of course the 100 def/SB can't overcome the 75 SPD.
There has to be a final number right? Otherwise, how does the engine determine who's the better player on an exact possession?
Use the following example:
Offensive player: 85 ath, 35 spd, 55 lp, 55 per, 65 bh, passers on court = 40 passing rating
Defender: 75 ath, 95 spd, 95 defense, 65 sb.
You would say the defender wins this battle right? Because he's only 10 points behind in ath but has a 60 point edge in spd, and 95 defense. How do you make this decision that the defender is better when you cannnot compare apples to apples (defender doesn't have the equivalent lp/per/bh/etc ratings, and vice versa for the offensive player) and when one player is not overwhelmingly dominant in every category?
You made this decision by weighing the relative attributes and coming up with a comparison using the every category. Essentially, you assigned an overall efficiency # to both players and just compared them. Without doing so, you cannot make any comparisons.