New leaderboard idea - your best scores only.

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Aquatarkus

New leaderboard idea - your best scores only.

Post by Aquatarkus »

What if the leaderboard changed from being unlimited to counting only each player's 50 best games? The max score would be 5000, 50 first place recordings. The rank difference between (only 11 have 50 1st places right now) these players would be determined by their best 200 recordings.
<p>

Most of the leaderboard would stay the same, but it would change the competition for the top 10 to 20 slots quite a bit. I think it would be for the better (encouraging the elite to fight on existing games rather than joining the "Beta Rush"). What do you guys think?

<p>

Aqua

--
aquatarkus@digicron.com
Dave Kaupp

Post by Dave Kaupp »

I like the scoring system as it is right now. As soon as I get 1400
mediocore scores I'll go and start improving them. ;)

<p>

I guess I could always spend 8 hours on one game and get a mighty
score or spend 8 hours on 10 games and have a little more fun learning
new games.

--
info@kaupp.cx
Chad

Post by Chad »

A wonderfully innovative idea to stop lame recordings from boosting
a player's score :) too bad it's just more work for zwaxy who's
already done soo much. We can hope it's not too troublesome to add a
new scoring scheme.

--
churritz@cts.com
Q.T.Quazar

Post by Q.T.Quazar »

I have to agree with Dave on this one. I'd rather submit my mediocre
scores first and then build them afterwards (there is going to be a
definite division here between the new and old players at MARP)

<p>

Secondly, the proposal doesn't solve anything. MARP has, what, 1400
games as of this time? It's fairly easy to find close to 50 games,
that people either have few or bad scores on (I've located most of
them already :) ) Therefore there's no guarantee that the people
in the top 10 deserve to be. The system is great as it is now. If BBH
can damn near finish 150 games, he deserves to be #1, and not me for
finding 50 clones that nobody wants to play.

--
qan@home.com
JoustGod

Post by JoustGod »

I like the idea, Aqua. Anything to put a halt to the current rush of
lame recordings. It may have to be tweaked a bit here and there, but
a solid idea nonetheless.

<p>

Now I know that I've got roughly as many recordings as some of our
newcomers, but that was over the course of a year and a half or so!
Not the current "get 500 scores per month" rate that MARP is
currently experiencing. Nothing wrong with massive uploads, but come
on, have a little pride, huh?

<p>

JoustGod

--
pinballwiz1@msn.com
Dave Kaupp

Post by Dave Kaupp »

Out out of curiosity, what constitutes a "lame" score?
<p>

I may be way off base here, but I thought MARP was about submitting
scores, not just particular scores.

<p>

A better ruling may be that you can only submit a score of place 3 or
higher, all scores lower than that would be deleted.

<p>

Or better yet, submissions will only be accepted if they beat the 1st
place score. Once someone gets a massive score on a game, its pretty
much closed. Once all/most games have massive scores the uploading
will dwindle and the leader board will stay pretty much static.

<p>

Or even beter. Only ONE submission per game per player. This would
make the player only submit his/her all time best score. Pherhaps once
a year a player would be allowed to upload again in that game.

<p>

Just some thoughts and ideas. :)

--
info@kaupp.cx
Gameboy9

Post by Gameboy9 »

I say a player can make the MARP anyway s/he wants it to be - well at
least in terms of high scores in arcade games anyway. You can make
it your own personal high score archive, or you can work on the
scores that are challenged. You can get tons points on the
leaderboard by trying all the games, or you can try to get 100 points
on every game. Because of this reasoning, I say a player's score in
that player's opinion is NEVER a lame score. It may be lame to
another person, but in most cases, a personal record is NEVER lame to
the player, except maybe against the MARP in general.

<p>

Now I'm probably using only one case, myself - but I bet this is true
to most or all of you. With this reasoning in mind - I will give the
opinion to keep the leaderboard the same way as it is - which I
believe rewards all the players for their accomplishments. If you
say only accept a score that will place it in the top three(which is
what we used to do in a way), I think that discourages players from
showing off their best. True, it may not be the best in the MARP,
but it's the best to the player itself.

<p>

This leaderboard issue is arguably the most controversial issue in
the MARP(2nd is the tournament... in my opinion anyway :) ) - it
probably will be for quite some time... no matter how you make it,
you'll probably still get different opinions... I guess the point is,
you can satisfy some of the people all of the time, but you can't
satisfy all of the people some of the time. (Is that the right quote?)

<p>

Thanks for reading my thoughts :)

--
goldengameboy@yahoo.com
JoustGod

Post by JoustGod »

Well Dave, first off, a "lame" score can be various definitions to be
sure. However...if you observe some of the recordings that have hit
MARP lately, I would find it hard to label it anything else. A factor
that is considered in this personal opinion include my observation
that the players in question are good players who normally can post
decent if not top scores on many other games. The fact that they
occasionally throw in some scores that obviously were played well
below their capabilities is a red flag if I ever saw one. Perhaps
they don't really enjoy the game (not unusual, I dislike a whole slew
of games emulated by MAME). That disinterest, if that's what it is,
definitely shows up in the score and how the game is played. So my
question is, why even bother? The answer: It's for the points, my
friend! Nothing wrong with that as point-grabbing has been going on
at MARP long before most of you discovered this wonderful gathering
place for the planet's top players. I'm just calling those particular
scores what they are...lame.

<p>

I don't agree with limiting anyone here on how many scores they can
upload. But I just felt compelled to note that there are increasing
amounts of lame scores cluttering up the MARP landscape. Submit 'em
if you want to MARPers, but just don't get offended if you spend 2
minutes learning a game, submit that practice session and then
someone calls it lame. That's really the point I'm getting at here.

<p>

JoustGod

--
pinballwiz1@msn.com
Aquatarkus

Post by Aquatarkus »

A few things to put my idea in perspective:
<p>

I believe the ideal scoreboard would have an entry from every player
for every game, giving an accurate score curve. Real world time
constraints, and the dedicated efforts of the MAME team to emulate
every minor chip revision known to the internet, make this
impossible. I probably haven't sent in 50 recordings myself, and even
if I sent in one for every MAME game I ever played I still probably
wouldn't hit 500.

<p>

The only "lame" scores (aside from the joke games) are where the
player didn't really try - extreme evidence of this (on most
machines) is failing to beat the demo screen, not making the default
high score table, not seeing the first intermission, not clearing the
second wave, etc.. Even as good as a first or second try from someone
like Angry or BBH probably is, it's not what should be here. "High
score" means HIGH SCORE - your best attempt. If you can bury the game
- 10 times or more the #2 - DO IT. Don't wait for someone else to
show up.

<p>

That's why I don't think a "Top X" for each game is the way to go. It
discourages medium players from trying, and encourages excellent
players to move to a different game as soon as they get first place.
But "Top X", and the current system, are the only two I've ever seen
anyone propose for MARP.

I was trying to reply to Chris Parsley's thread about setting a
minimum score, but I realized I'd left the topic so I made a new one.
Unlike most of the time I suggest things, I don't know what the
immediate effect will be. I came up with the 50/200 figures after a
quick look at the leaders - first idea was 50/100 but two people have
100+ first place scores. I don't expect my ranking to change much if
it's implemented (#45 I think), or to ever hit 50 first place
recordings and join the battle for #1.

<p>

I wasn't trying to eliminate quantity of games as a factor, just tone
down the extreme advantage shooting for 1400+ recordings has during
the weekly beta era. 50 looked like enough, but I did little more
than draw numbers out of a hat to illustrate the concept - I spent
two or three minutes on the numbers and most of it was waiting for
different pages to come up. The right numbers are probably larger.

<p>

To Gameboy9: Yes, someone could go searching for games with bad
scores to qualify, but the other qualified players would probably
attack his 1st place scores to kick the jerk out of the race. Part of
the point was to increase the value of fighting other elite players :)
A deserving player not qualifying is more of a worry to me - Krogman
only has 39.

<p>

To JoustGod: No upload limit intended. The scoreboard floats, and
someone's best games today could be very different from tommorrow.
The proposal is only for leaderboard credit.

<p>

Aqua

--
aquatarkus@digicron.com
Dave Kaupp

Post by Dave Kaupp »

JG,
<p>

I see what you mean about some of the scores. I cant say anything for
the rest of the players, but the low scores I've submitted where
markers for a game I liked or could improve or with more practice at a
later time. With over 1400 games, it will take me a few months just to
try them all much less master them. :)

<p>

So yes some of my scores are lame, I prefer to call them markers.

--
info@kaupp.cx
Chad

Post by Chad »

I know this will make things more confusing, but I think I have a
modification that might be an improvement to Aqua's.

<p>

Pick the N best games, maybe 50 maybe 100 maybe 500. Then after the
best games, leaderpoint points would ONLY count for recordings that
are in the top 3. So If you placed in the Top three in ALL of your
recordings they all will count, no matter how many recordings you
input. But If you put up many [of the controversal] lame scores,
only the best N scores would count.

<p>

This will prevent someone from thinking that putting marker scores up
for 1400 games will benefit their leaderboard score, since what should
benefit the leaderboard score is if 1400 of those scores are in the
top 3. I like the idea of using MARP as a database to mark your own
best score at the moment, since who can remember what their high
scores are for so many games. I'm not against quantity, i'm just
against quantity without quality for a leaderboard score.

--
churritz@cts.com
Dave Kaupp

Post by Dave Kaupp »

Somebody putting up 1400 (or whatever amount) of low scores may get
them in the leaderboard today, but if that person never went back to
improve there scores, the would eventually migrate down the
leaderboard as higher scores for that game are posted.

<p>

Person A scores 10,000 gets 100 points, person B scores 20,000,
person A now has 50 points. Person C scores 100,000. Person A now has
10 points. If person A never improves that score, he is bumped down 90
points.

<p>

The current point system works fine the way it is, over time every
thing should even out as more and more players submit scores for each
game.

<p>

PS: Sorry I was being facitious about my previous submission rules. I
don't think it needs to be overly complicated.

--
info@kaupp.cx
BBH

Post by BBH »

Ok, my views on these leaderboard disputes.<p>

I've always been an advocate of quality over quantity. Yeah, I've
broken down and uploaded some crappy scores for temporary leaderboard
points, but the rest of the time I'm making a conscious effort to
learn the game and submit what I feel is a "good" score for me. Very
rarely do I UL something that won't have 1st place at the time. I
guess this is mainly because of the old 10-3-1 scoring system... I
like the new percentage scoring too but I still like the old one as
well... gotta break the 2000 mark ;)

<p>

I guess it's just kinda weird to see some "newcomers" come close to
matching (or even surpassing?) the number of submissions that either
JoustGod or I have... seeing how we've been over here for well over a
year. And yes, I AM against lame submissions... but who am I to say if
a recording is lame or not? I just think that sometimes the player is
MUCH better off giving the game a few more plays before rushing to
upload a recording for some more leaderboard points. For example, take
Q.T. Quazar's Body Slam recording (Q.T., I'm not singling you out to
pick on you! I already know you have enough to put up with considering
Discipline's headhunting). He scored 120 points, and SportsDude has
the high at 31,230. The 120 scores *0* points as it isn't even 1% of
31k. So isn't this really a waste of time? Just spend a few more games
getting the mechanics down so the recording actually claims some
leaderboard points.

<p>

Oh yeah, and I'm against scores on games that are considered "broken".
Sure I gave in and did Battle Lane recordings, but who hasn't? It
doesn't take any skill at all to start up the game, and it takes an
eensy teeny tiny bit to get 540 or 550 or whatever on the two Cabal
sets. If those romsets are fixed and work as well as cabalbl, how many
of the people are going to re-record?

<p>

And people should always be allowed to better their own scores,
putting restrictions on how often people can upload scores is a bit
silly. My Psychic 5 recordings went from 140k to 6 million as I
learned all the nuances of the game... and then Alan Kwan shows me up
by getting 8.4 million, heh :P

<p>


-BBH

--
lordbbh@aol.com
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