- Posts: 2143
- Joined: Tue Aug 28, 2012 5:32 am
Valen wrote:Yes, if you have enough experience you can look at a card and do a good approximation of how desirable that card is. But that does not make a ratings guide or other method of detailed counting of the card of no value
Nobody ever said ratings guides or other methods of counting cards had no value. Holiday excitement must be affecting some people's reading....
I would compare it to watching several pitchers throw a baseball. I can tell who the hard throwers are just by watching. But there is no way anyone will convince me they can always tell who throws hardest from just watching if they are close to the same velocity. So if I were a scout I absolutely would want a radar gun reading. Same in Strat. I can tell by looking a Hank Aaron card is better than a Tommy Aaron card. It is the ones that are only slightly different that you want more precision.
This is a major reason why I don't use ratings guides. I have always enjoyed reading cards/scouting as a major part of the game, and I have always enjoyed honing my skills at doing so. I, and many other managers, don't want a "radar gun reading" provided to us by a ratings guide. We don't care if we get it exactly right. We want to read, interpret, and evaluate the cards on our own. If maximizing winning is more important to you than the pleasurable challenge of reading/interpreting cards for yourself, then ratings guides are for you. For those of us who prefer the pleasurable challenge of reading/interpreting cards for ourselves over maximizing winning, they are not for us.