- Posts: 22
- Joined: Fri Aug 15, 2014 2:36 pm
I have a serious issue with the HR rate in this game too. It's off the reservation Home Runs if you know which cards and which park to pick. I know most of you don't agree but that is not simulation, its exploiting. I also have a major issue with RPs that pitch more innings than any starter on their team, that just ain't baseball!
It's "off the reservation" home runs in Coors Field, Rangers Stadium, and Great American Ballpark in the real world as well. So, the disparity isn't extreme, and the simulation is legitimate. I explained to you in the ATG thread that SOM doesn't try to rigidly simulate the actual results and dimensions of MLB. Because it favors creative, flexible team-building over rigidly accurate representation, its simulation allows for some discrepancy between MLB results and team results in its leagues. As I said before, if that discrepancy bothers you, SOM definitely isn't for you.
Also, managers using home run parks no more "exploit" their parks than managers tailoring their teams to their pitchers', lefty, or righty parks. Like general managers of the Padres, Giants, Rangers, or Rockies, they choose players who best fit their parks; Drew Stubbs would hardly produce as well in Petco as he has in Coors. That's not "exploitation;' it's strategy.
For the managers who defend this and say that Strat-o-matic is simulating realistic outcomes I have a question. Have any of you ever played any of the vastly more robust baseball simulators and seen results like this game will produce with these strategies? I doubt it......
It's a game surely, I'm just not buying it as a simulator.
No, I haven't played those simulators you mentioned. My wife is already a bit apoplectic about my 7 teams on SOM. However, even if I did have the money and the time, they don't sound very interesting to me. Although I do enjoy the realism SOM does provide, I don't play to produce rigid simulation of actual MLB results. I don't understand why anyone would want to put creative effort into an enterprise where the result was pretty much fixed. Apparently, you do. As I said before, if you want a more creative, less stringently mimetic change of pace, stick with SOM. If you expect the extreme replication those simulators you mention provide, you should probably stick with them.
I hope that was helpful and "flame"-free.