He didnt answer my question either.
It seemed like useful conversation had concluded, but if you insist...
You cannot assume that the other two sides only will fight bish, it happens to all sides.
I don't assume that, in fact I used rooks as the gangee in my latest example.
I have yet to hear you answer the question of having this same advantage against the lowest side and both sides ganging the lower side, would that still be fair in your eyes?
If one side is getting ganged by both other sides, the gangee will be at a disadvantage regardless of the overall numbers.
If you define numerical imbalance as unfair, no, that isn't fair. But ENY does nothing to address it because ENY doesn't take the ganging into account, it assumes each side is putting half its resources against each other side, which is rarely true.
Another problem with ENY is it's based on the lowest side rather than the total. If you have 100 nits against 80 rooks and 80 bish, and all the rooks and bish are attacking the nits, it is 160-100 with the 100 nits having a moderate ENY (which is
definitely unfair, they're outnumbered AND have ENY?!?) But if you have 100 nits against 120 rooks and 40 bish, the nits' ENY suddenly shoots up to 29, even though the numerical imbalance - 160 rooks + bish against 100 nits - is EXACTLY the same. Of course the rooks will have a high ENY too, but the bish won't even though they probably have a numerical advantage because most of the nits will be fighting the rooks. If all the nits give up fighting the bish because they're fed up with ENY and instead go to fight the rooks on roughly equal terms, then you have a bish "excess" of 40 planes free to horde unopposed, with 0 ENY, even though OVERALL they are the smallest side by far. This is why overall numbers mean nothing.