(Oct. 10, 2016 7:24 PM)Kei Wrote: Worth noting that if battles played in small events of six players or less were allowed to be ranked, all players participating would be at a severe disadvantage in the long term because of the size multiplier in the equation that is applied to the winners of every battle in our ranking system. The multiplier increases or decreases slightly depending on the number of participants in any given event; this is because doing well in a large tournament is understandably a more difficult task given their more chaotic nature and greater chance of going up against unknown players, which makes it harder to scout all of your opponents reliably, predict what they will use, and ultimately choose the right combo.
Our current minimum of seven participants already pushes the limits in terms of it being fair to participants of all BeyRanks low and high. For example, with my 1,688 BP in Metal Format currently, I would have to go undefeated to come out ahead most likely in a seven player event. The effects of this can typically only be seen among highly ranked players, but this is already arguably discouraging and unreasonable because perfection in Beyblade is unreasonable no matter how good of a player you are.
Very interesting indeed. But I question whether this would really be problem in practice. In your own case, your high rank comes from years of intense involvement with the sport. You regularly attend tournaments of 7+ members. You're a strong blader worldwide, as well as in your locality. You're also a pretty rare individual in the global sense. Someone like you, in practice, has no need for small tournaments because you clearly have access to more lucrative play options. Why attend a 4-person tournament when you can comfortably attend a 7+ tournament?
The BeyPoint scaling system as you describe encourages participation in larger tournaments for good reason. Similarly, it discourages smaller tournaments. This is a good thing! And I think this is entirely conducive of what a smaller tournament would offer the community at large. Celebrity-rockstar-bladers would indeed be worse-off at a small tournament - they also won't need to attend small tournaments in the first place because they clearly have better options. If it's not worth your while, just don't attend.
But I would guess (just guess, for now) that there are many more bladers who genuinely would benefit from attending a small tournament, inclusive of the severely limited rewards one naturally gains from that setting - raw beginners, people in remote areas, die-hards in dead communities, etc. These groups are very common. In many cases (and all cases in Australia), these groups do not even technically exist, so far as the WBO is concerned. But the fact is we're here, wanting to be a part of the official WBO system (ranked) and we don't much mind if our local metagame and rankings are far behind the rockstar-crowd of Toronto. Keeping track of (unofficial) local rankings in MFB was awesome.
Being part of the official system is crucially important. Take Time's recent (and not so relevant) account of paying for a random bystander's entry in his tournament. He paid that additional entry fee just so his tournament (which he had dutifully organised) could actually run officially - not just to randomly bloat the numbers. Once he had his minimum attendance, he did not pay anyone else's entry fee. All that mattered to him (in this case) was that his tournament was counted as official. His priority in this case was to secure the tournament itself. In this case specifically (and regardless of his other dealings), we see how it was worth a memeber actually parting with more money just to be counted in the WBO community. Regardless of the result, it is a big deal just to be able to participate in an official capacity. In small groups (small for whatever reason), this is even more important - the alternative is, technically, oblivion.
So yeah, I see what you're saying and I totally agree. The smaller the tournament, the harder it is to maintain and climb in rank. But I think it is totally appropriate to discourage smaller tournaments in exactly this way. If someone has access to a larger group of members, they should absolutely be attending larger tournaments, rather than trying (and failing) to farm the smaller group. Seems perfect, to me.
Meanwhile, smaller tournaments would give the proverbial dregs of the Beyblade world something to keep them included until times changes. I feel this must surely apply more broadly than just Australia.
(And yeah, I see Brad's argument for other forms of reward, which is cool. I do feel that being included in the official comunity would carry much greater weight for otherwise excluded members though.)