Jowels wrote:First of all, there seems to be a lot of people advocating for Dwyrin to tell the opponent that they are a lot stronger than their sandbag rank. This would ruin the whole point of the video! If you tell your opponent truthfully that you are a lot stronger than they are, they will not play as if they are playing a similarly-ranked player! Shame on people who lack this awareness!
I assume this is some sort of irony, since most of the same commenters have the awareness, just doubt this is true. Even if it were true, it doesn't justify the deceit.
Jowels wrote:
Second of all, I applaud Dwyrin for his courage to continue his sandbag series rather than keeling over due to people whining on the internet.
I'm not telling him to stop, I'm just saying why I quit watching it. You can whine about that, I'm still quitting.
Jowels wrote:
No harm is legitimately caused to anyone by Dwyrin's choice to occasionally sandbag. Go is played for fun and as long as the opponent believes he has a fighting chance, it does not take away that player's fun or enjoyment!
There's effectively no difference in cheating or sandbagging on the opponet: they believe they have a chance and they don't. It's not the end of the world but it's unfair.
Jowels wrote:
Lastly, I'll admit losing sucks. To spend 45 minutes or an hour fighting a game you don't have an actual chance of winning is indeed both stressful and frustrating. There's no way around this though because servers can't really bend over backwards to prevent sandbagging and AI-cheating.

You seem to put individual responsibility behind policy. I like to strive for a world where people behave without the threat of punishment. And I certainly don't encourage bad behavior in absence of enforced policies.