TG or not TG
Posted: Fri Sep 03, 1999 12:30 pm
It has normally been the custom in this forum not to use direct quotes from other forum posts. This time I'm going to break that. Although this is in direct response, it belongs in a seperate thread because I'm completely changing the context.
<p>
I'm also signing this at the front, David M. Waters - Aquatarkus, instead of at the end so the people reading the automated email version will know who is speaking.
<p>
In other words, this is an answer to more than just "Thoughts on the End of the Tournament".
<p>
The following block was written by Gameboy9:
>>>>
What I was going to do for the end of the tournament - I was thinking about emailing Mark Longridge and/or Walter Day the results of the tournament, indicating the top three or five scores, and the DIP settings that we used, and whether or not those were TG or default - to my knowledge. They can do whatever they please with these results... but seeing that we are playing some games by the TG settings, they should count for the TG book, no?
>>>>
<p>
In 1998, my answer was an unrestricted "Yes!".
<p>
There were several scores that I sent in to MARP, one of the most glaring examples a 3 life Reactor score, because I wanted to get the attention of the players drawn to the TG settings. Part of the reason was to get the people playing the emulated versions to shift from using defaults (or whatever the easy settings were) to trying the hard versions just because I prefer playing most games on hardest. The other reason was to get some deserving players recognition from about the only source used to treating arcade games in general as a serious subject.
<p>
I find my opinion shifting for several reasons, but three seem to be the most important.
<p>
1. There seem to be very few people in the "TG circle" that take any home games, especially emulated, the least bit seriously.
<p>
2. The proof requirements in ancient times isn't strong enough to convince an outsider.
<p>
3. A large portion of settings have been lost. For the games with no settings on the twingalaxies.com webpage, "unknown" is a lot closer to the truth than "defaults".
<p>
At this point in time, my answer is "no". I may just be overreacting to certain things, like the ongoing posturing of Chris Ayra. But ... I'm damn close to saying they're irrelevant and that we need something else to use as a standard even if I have to create one myself.
--
aquatarkus@digicron.com
<p>
I'm also signing this at the front, David M. Waters - Aquatarkus, instead of at the end so the people reading the automated email version will know who is speaking.
<p>
In other words, this is an answer to more than just "Thoughts on the End of the Tournament".
<p>
The following block was written by Gameboy9:
>>>>
What I was going to do for the end of the tournament - I was thinking about emailing Mark Longridge and/or Walter Day the results of the tournament, indicating the top three or five scores, and the DIP settings that we used, and whether or not those were TG or default - to my knowledge. They can do whatever they please with these results... but seeing that we are playing some games by the TG settings, they should count for the TG book, no?
>>>>
<p>
In 1998, my answer was an unrestricted "Yes!".
<p>
There were several scores that I sent in to MARP, one of the most glaring examples a 3 life Reactor score, because I wanted to get the attention of the players drawn to the TG settings. Part of the reason was to get the people playing the emulated versions to shift from using defaults (or whatever the easy settings were) to trying the hard versions just because I prefer playing most games on hardest. The other reason was to get some deserving players recognition from about the only source used to treating arcade games in general as a serious subject.
<p>
I find my opinion shifting for several reasons, but three seem to be the most important.
<p>
1. There seem to be very few people in the "TG circle" that take any home games, especially emulated, the least bit seriously.
<p>
2. The proof requirements in ancient times isn't strong enough to convince an outsider.
<p>
3. A large portion of settings have been lost. For the games with no settings on the twingalaxies.com webpage, "unknown" is a lot closer to the truth than "defaults".
<p>
At this point in time, my answer is "no". I may just be overreacting to certain things, like the ongoing posturing of Chris Ayra. But ... I'm damn close to saying they're irrelevant and that we need something else to use as a standard even if I have to create one myself.
--
aquatarkus@digicron.com