Joaz Banbeck wrote:padic wrote:Creating a new forum is fine with me, but I'm strongly against anything that involves someone other than the players deciding what is and is not a "Malkovich game". I'm not sure whether there are players who feel that the games they play in the Malkovich forums are not actually Malkovich games.
It's clear that not all the ongoing Malkovich games are exactly like the first game that was played, but I don't think it's so terrible that the form is evolving into different directions.
I think that the term you want is 'devolving'. The players in question are simply doing less. Not different, just less. Unless you consider snide comments about one's opponent to be an improvement in a different direction.
The term I wanted was "evolving", which is why that was the word I put in my post. It's a simple, objective word that carries no value judgement of any sort.
It seems clear that you don't like the more sparsely-commented games. That's fine. However, others do --
I do -- and it seems somewhat presumptuous of you to just dismiss the possibility that this might be so. "Not different, just less" is self-contradictory. Less is different. And in some cases, more is just not better.
To be clear, I absolutely don't want the richly-commented games to go away. I just don't see why there's any reason we have to choose between the two -- can't we have both? Having too many threads is not something I see as even a potential problem. I'm under no obligation to read all the ongoing threads. In fact, even now I do not. If we ever reach the point where it becomes technically hard to keep track of the threads we do want to follow, we should implement some technical solutions, such as special filtering and subscription options. However, I don't think we're there yet, and besides, that's the sort of problem we
want to have. That problem is just a direct indication that a large number of people are enjoying the forum and participating.