(Sep. 10, 2021 3:41 PM)Kei Wrote:I don’t think we can expect 2 beyblades to hit the floor at precisely the same time, all the time …. I am not trying to say because we use the floor, the beyblades will all of the sudden contact the floor at the same time. It will always be “close enough.” The idea of the floor being the starting point is that both beyblades would have had an opportunity to have the driver make contact with the stadium floor. This would mean the fully constructed Beyblade would have interacted with the play surface in a way that it was intended to. The driver is there for the reason of contacting the stadium floor in my opinion. I also believe because the stadium floor is a visible starting line, it is easier to judge. I find it hard to believe that it would be easier to judge launch timing of 2 beyblades colliding in mid-air vs 2 beyblades landing on the stadium floor.(Sep. 10, 2021 3:31 PM)Shindog Wrote: I don’t think the dynamite user launched early and I believe the vanish user did Launch a bit late. I do personally see a problem in the first video. I was there in real time and didn’t see a problem. I guess my point is that even with video it can be hard to decide.
For sure, I agree. Judging can be hard. These situations will never be fully black and white. The judge exists in order to make a decision to the best of their ability.
I think no matter what rules we implement, there will be a component of it that becomes difficult to judge. There can be some difficulties judging Gattyaki, but there could also be difficulties judging if both Beyblades hitting the stadium floor was mandated as the point at which a match starts. How can you precisely tell the exact moment when both Beyblades have touched the floor?
In both scenarios there will inherently be incentives to launch early or late. Players will always push the limits in order to gain an advantage. It's up to the judges to decide whether whatever each player does exists within the parameters of what our launching rules permit, which will always exist on a spectrum given the realities I mentioned before.
If we accept that judging will always be difficult, then the discussion becomes more of a philosophical one with regards to whether we believe Gattyaki is a legitimate technique or not. I absolutely believe it is, but I understand those who feel otherwise. There is no clear or definitive objectively correct answer here. And that's what has made this discussion so difficult to resolve.
I do feel like these points I am making are just being repeated in this thread.