IMPORTANT TO READ THIS QUOTE BY SALVAN
Quote from: A8TOOL on October 08, 2008, 04:13:33 AM
By my forth month I had all the tricks in play and tried to apply them to a squad. I kept some notes and passed them on but in the end it made some people very miserable. Score has it's dangers and like the game itself, can also become addicting... so beware. If done right it can be very satisfying and takes very little fun from the game if any at all.
Quote from: 475FG Savlan on October 08, 2008, 04:17:07 PM
<S> Tool,
Speaking from personal experience as a squad CO of a group that has played together over ten years, I would contribute that in my honest opinion emphasizing anything at squad level that is score based is like introducing a cancer into your group,
opening the door for animosity & discourse to creep in.Guys become competitive over kills, & accusations of kill stealing can rear their ugly head. Flights lose cohesion as everyone gangs the first bandit they see because they are all hungry for a kill. Fellows will alter their approach to their flights because they are more worried about their score than clearing a squaddie. Or on the flip side, gents will squabble that their high score flight was messed up because they died trying to rescue a squadmate who didnt fly 'smartly'.All those events are contrary to my goal of having a group of friends to bs with, fly together with and have fun doing it - the true meaning of being in a healthy, thriving online game group.
Checking score can be a great way to monitor personal progress ( i.e k/d ratio, gunnery percentage ) and HT provides us with all we need to do so in an extensive format, both web based & in game. If you try to change this to a group approach, then as you stated some will find it not their cup of tea, or they cant compete or 'hang' with other squad mates, and people start drifting into different directions.
Scoring is divisive to a group.
Score is the Yoko Ono of squads Smiley
475FG Savlan