Joaz Banbeck wrote:I'm rather disappointed in this one. And, no, not because I got voted off early. ( That's a chance you take when you join up. It is like walking onto a baseball field - if you are not willing to take a bouncer in the face, you shouldn't walk on. )
The rules of the game were substantially different than a normal game of go, and the majority of you never really explored this. You treated it almost like a normal game. You voted off guys because they were willing to go, not because you thought that it would help you win the game. Nobody but me explored the strategies of using voting to win the game.
Not correct, that's just what you read. I voted off those willing to go with that reason because they were on team White. Every vote made was political, and the last two votes were done in collusion with the rest of my "family". To begin with my moves were "even" moves, and as it went on I voted for progressively larger bad moves for White, and made sure that the team were all on the same page, so to speak. I believe Black won the mafia war, not the Go game, and it led to winning on the board also.
Joaz Banbeck wrote:My dissapointment was particularly acute near the end when it was obvious that white was doomed. At that point the only rational attempt by white players to win the game was to start voting for bad black moves. But nobody did. It was like watching a 29K play a ladder all the way across the board, one doomed move after another, with no attempt to understand what is going on or to change it.
You remaining white players did not know if you were the majority or not. But you knew that you could not possibly win on the board with normal moves. Your only chance to win was to vote for a bad black move and hope that you had enough votes. And you didn't even try.
I can't comment on White, but this wasn't the case for Black.
Joaz Banbeck wrote:What is the point in playing a game like this if you are not going to try to win with all the tools that you have? Would you play chess but refuse to move your queen more than one space? Would you play basketball but never try a 3-pointer? Those used to be the rules: the queen moved one space, and a bucket was two points. But when new possibilities were added, people used them.
As did Black here