There's a whole lot of off stuff that's been going on lately, so allow me to pick out what's sticking out to me.
Major WALL OF TEXT warning. I'll try to post smaller, more temporally relevant things over the course of the day, since it's a fairly light class load for me on Wednesday. If you tl;dr this post, at least read the bit after the "---" where I'll summarize what I'm doing with the information.
So... both Dhyer and Fnorder posted within 30-45 minutes of my post pointing them out as lurkers. That takes them out of the "they've been gone over 24 hours" pile and puts them in the "where's the content?" pile.
1.
Since when is your action as scum, being the second vote on day one, (Which obviously wasn't much of a tell, since you survived that game), that you yourself said was a joke when you did it, suddenly someone else's scum tell? After your vote on Andrew, you sort of vanished- it's been a day for you, too, so care to clarify a bit?
I read this as "since when is what you did as scum a reason to pick out another person who did that thing as scum?" which seems kind of silly. I've seen a lot of argument revolving around what person X did as scum last time and what that therefore means for this time. Past behavior, argument surrounding what one did when they were scum and anyone with similar behaviors might be scum too, et cetera. Excal did it in VtM without being scum, so I don't really see why it's not a valid argument. You might possibly be saying that because smodge claimed it was a joke it was not in any way a reflection of his having been scum, but that doesn't seem particularly important. What he says is far less important than what he does.
2. (re:
http://www.rpgdl.com/forums/index.php?topic=375.msg8421#msg8421 ) Otter, I really think your argument is losing value because you insist on using such extreme vocabulary. From your quote: "it's consistantly, constantly scummy.
Every time" and "blatantly anti-town". Then from the post: Then the very polarizing and inflammatory way you begin your post (doubting whether someone's "even reading my posts anymore," insisting on completely consistent play, stating nearly outright that what you're doing is your Town marker and if you were doing it any differently you'd be scum). Then you wonder how Ciato's apparent play of choice could "
ever possibly win a game for town" and ask people to tell you "how that could
ever result in anything but scum victory" (in that case, your emphasis and not mine). I find it hard to believe that you couldn't allow for a single circumstance in which a person -- a single person, in this case, since you're attacking Ciato for her personal actions -- sitting back and watching how things develop through the beginning of the day could be working for town.
Personally and generally, I agree that the game needs to move and people not participating is missing the spirit of the game. However, I don't think it's any more anti-town to do that than to repeatedly and rather viciously attack someone for doing so even when the conversation begins to drift elsewhere. The only reason I'm not voting for either of you on those respective points is because I've seen an argument like this crop up in every single game, and I've been involved in them
as town, and I don't think that it in and of itself is going to tell anyone much of anything.
I really don't agree that someone needs to be in danger before meaningful content can be found, as you're suggesting in your subsequent post. It helps when they're responding to specific criticism, it's true, but sometimes what they do and don't say when no one's suspicious says volumes.
3. Corwin, I'm beginning to respond to
this post, but what I have to say carries on into the others you have. Why on earth are you finding it so hard to slip in that one thing which will validate your votes? It very, very minorly relates to flavor, but it is not in any way shape or form phrased that way in the rules. Even your response to Alex stating very plainly that your belated attempt to slide it in by using Otter's name doesn't count, you simply say you didn't think he'd take that requirement seriously. Yes, now everyone is aware that you have in fact read the rules and your vote counts, but I can't fathom why a small thing like that is such a sticking point, to where you're willing to risk being eyeballed rather than fulfill it. Seriously, why? I have a hard time not seeing it as an honest mistake -- not reading the rules -- that you'd rather take a principled stance on rather than admit you've made a mistake and are trying to avoid people calling you scummy for not paying attention.
4. Andrew I'm ... kind of on the fence about. The one thing which really sticks out to me from his defense is what he says to Kilga. Bad play is never and has never been a safe thing to hide behind. See how often smodge and Tom got lynched for it, see how quickly someone picks up on inconsistent arguments, watch how easily a train gets started on a townie who uses logically sound but game-play dangerous arguments like "if I were scum." That mistakes are a valid point of contention is the debate, but calling people on bad play is not. They are
not the same thing. This feels a little too "hahah, see how good-natured I'm being about being called on for my totally honest mistake? it's only natural, I expect it, 'cause it's a tool we can use to catch the REAL scum!" for my tastes. It's a continuum of response, though, and not something I'd be comfortable voting him for at this point since the alternative ("Gosh, you guys suck, it was JUST A MISTAKE and townies make mistakes too!") would be equally off-putting.
5. smodge is digging himself a hole, I see. The thing that sticks out to me the most is that his quick overview of his thoughts on other people pretty directly summarizes what's already been said about them or what they've said about themselves. I don't have a problem with someone agreeing with another's arguments, but I do have a problem with a lack of independent direction. It seems far too convenient to hop on trains that have already formed and justify why you're doing that thing other people are doing because they're doing it and they seem to have reasons that I don't find an immediate need to question. I can at least agree with Ciato in that thoughtful voting is far more useful than tossing one's vote around. Here, I see smodge doing the latter -- it's not the number of votes, it's the ease and frequency (relative to posts and their content) with which they're tossed around.
6. Kilga and Fnorder... they've made an appearance, as I noted at the beginning of this massively long post, but as has been pointed out it was a fairly surface appearance. That still makes me a little uncomfortable, but it seems to be something to hold when there might be no better information to gain from other directions. Definitely going to take this moment to point out to them that they're on the radar for low-content lurking, and hope that encourages them to find something to say the next time they post.
---
This day is pushing 48 hours (I believe we're around 40 right now) and I don't see the need to drag Day 1 out as long as humanly possible. I want information. I would feel comfortable lynching a lurker in order to keep the game moving and stop people from later going "hey, where's so-and-so, let's vote them for skulking about!" when there are serious fingers being pointed about; it only seems distracting and handy for scum to be able to finger someone who's not contributing to get the heat off of their own scummy contributions. However, the flow doesn't seem to be going this direction and ... well... there is no direction.
smodge has 3 votes, Ciato and Andrew both have 2, and pretty much everyone else has 1 -- a number of which are still jokevotes -- so that's not really somewhere to go. smodge seems the worst off in this case with me amongst those who could conceivably attain consensus without a whole new line of argument, so that's where I'm going to put my vote.
##UNVOTE Ciato##VOTE smodge