(May. 30, 2013 12:50 PM)Janstarblast Wrote: I mean, the way he put it, what we call "deception" is actually "feint".
However, deception (more precisely, fake-outs) is about setting up decoys for your opponent, and then striking when he's distracted. Its like when a player falls down while playing soccer, pretending to have been injured, but then suddenly charges down the field (completely fine) and scores a goal. You don't see that happen, because that is wrong.
Using the same example with reference to Beyblade, is the situation wherein you show your opponent a weak combo, and return with an extremely strong one- thus catching him unawares.
Feint, in reference to your "The soccer player pretends to go or kick left, but goes to the right" example, is much fairer and is actually a way to enhance one's skill. In context of Beyblade, a Feint would be launching a Defense combo aggressively. This scenario, would be considered a feint. You use your own skill to strengthen something which would otherwise be weak and predictable.
That’s an interesting analogy. However, these players usually feign being injured on contact with another player to gain an advantage from the
referee, not to fool the other team, and it just looks silly if both teams try to do it at the same time. I think a more accurate analogy would be the player claiming a mechanical malfunction to try and invoke the Reshoot Clause to cover up a bad launch.
I don’t know if I would call shooting a Defense-type aggressively a feint, maybe, but it’s ambiguous. I think I would rather put it on the same level as choosing between having your Attack-type Tornado Stalling or make a Flower Pattern.
I also want to clarify my stance. I’m advocating deception—the one vs. one mind game where you try to convince the other player to willingly play according to your hand—a battle of wits, if you will. I am unequivocally against lying to a judge (about pretending to have your Beyblade set on your launcher, as one example mentioned here), which goes against the rule of competition, and squealing, which is a shameful coward’s tactics; third parties have no business interfering in other people’s battles.
On the subject of publicity, starting with parents. Has there been any formal complaints about this particular subject, I was a soccer referee for a few years during my early teens, and parents generally complain about anything that goes against their kids. They yell at any call against them or their team, praise the opposite, they want you to punish the other player because their own kid could not stay on his feet while trying to take the ball. I’m generalizing here, but they’re as likely to express disapproval because you’re using parts that do not come from the local store.
About sponsors, I don’t know who they are honestly. I’m guessing mostly (group of) members, stores, etc. Members would already know about it before sponsoring (through playing or research), companies would probably not care beyond the rulebook, deception being implicit, they would not know about it, and stores would range from super-involved to just-want-to-increase-traffic, depending on the owner. In any case, it shouldn't matter, deception, as it is under the rule of competition, is not malicious (we might have a different conversation if we were discussing
The Art of War); players shake hands after a match, and I haven’t seen any overly obnoxious behavior at AN, but my tournament experience is more limited than yours, from any angle.
You also bring the points of the cheapness of the tactics, isolated from the “parent†variable, used by older people against younger, and how knowledge plays little when deception is used. I have to discard the knowledge point. It is true that deception requires little knowledge against the unknowledgeable, but then again, I don’t need deception against them. On the other hand, against a player with both knowledge of tops and skills of deception, than it adds a new layer of depth, because you truly need to expect the unexpected, as your opponent knows what he does, and he is going to try to make you do what he wants you to do: you want to get first seats in the opponent’s head rather than rely on large amounts of luck and unreliable probabilities. Which brings to your next point, kids are not, or might not, be able to do it, and you need to learn to do it.. As for knowledge, there’s a large pool full of it here, and deception, make them learn how it works; and learning at the same time that not everything in life is what it seems to be sounds like a nice life lesson to me. There are many nice and honest people out there, but many more so are quite the opposite, but I’m getting sidetracked. Truth is I live in Quebec, whose education system revolves around leveling the strongest people down, rather than raising the weakest people up, something I've grown to despise. And I think we would be doing something similar here; instead of teaching them, we just tell them not to worry, that they will not have to learn, because we will simply prevent those that did from using it.
You also say it brings out innovation, and gave an example, but it would really need to be generalized to draw final conclusions, other people are as likely to fall back on the “safe†top-tier out of fear something new and different might not work / be too risky. Alternatively, I advocate deception, and didn't use a single top-tier at AN. I also want to say, and I conjecture (only slightly), but people tend to fall into habits and patterns quite easily, and when they do, they generally tend to think stop thinking outside the box.
Anyway, this should be my last post on this subject, unless I really need to wrap-up something I missed. I’m not one to paraphrase my own thoughts again and again. You want to get this approved ASAP; I don’t want to drag this on forever, and there is no point to it. The decision ultimately lies with neither you nor me. Your mind is set, and a large cohort of followers, and I’ve “made†my point, in a manner of speaking.