RE: BW-on Meta Match-ups Thread (Record your rounds here!)
There are inaccuracies in any way I do it, and this way is a lot easier to record. Not to mention the contributor team will continue to grow.
The way we're doing it now is having a small group of players who are about the same skill level playing every deck, if we accepted players of other skill levels it would throw off the data too much.
Also, they will not apply to just that skill level, there's a saying that goes "as above, so below," and in statistics that means if something is true for one group, it can likely be true for another group, for example, if I interview 10 people about whether or not they like the taste of blood, and 9 of them say yes, it's reasonably fair of me to assume that those 9 people speak for 90% of the people in that area, and so that way I don't have to ask everybody in town the same question.
If you think you're around the same skill level as the current team and would like a spot on the contributors list, PM me with the application.
RobertBenjamin said:There is a disadvantage in doing that which is your sample size will be small and biased towards the deck-building preferences of the players you choose to be in the said team. You have to keep in mind the meta covers a wide range of players and not a limited number of players.
The clear example of this was the fate of the Top Cut folks who played among themselves prior to Nationals and came to the tourney with decks that reflected the builds that suited the match-ups against themselves and not against the wide meta. This resulted in none of them making top cut in US Nationals.
There are inaccuracies in any way I do it, and this way is a lot easier to record. Not to mention the contributor team will continue to grow.
The way we're doing it now is having a small group of players who are about the same skill level playing every deck, if we accepted players of other skill levels it would throw off the data too much.
Also, they will not apply to just that skill level, there's a saying that goes "as above, so below," and in statistics that means if something is true for one group, it can likely be true for another group, for example, if I interview 10 people about whether or not they like the taste of blood, and 9 of them say yes, it's reasonably fair of me to assume that those 9 people speak for 90% of the people in that area, and so that way I don't have to ask everybody in town the same question.
If you think you're around the same skill level as the current team and would like a spot on the contributors list, PM me with the application.