lakeviewdave wrote:Like Scumby said, it's a time saver. I can count the cards and record the information on them and many players do. I don't have that time so I buy the ratings disk.
Totally agree. Its simple math (probability) to compute what the ratings guide provides and to get in a spreadsheet format to merge with other things helps evaluate players.
What else does the rating guide provide that you could not compute yourself?
If you count the cards incorrectly, that's your problem.
Ratings guide do not give an edge, everthing included can be manually computed.
Since you didn't address my post that answered all these questions, I'll say it again. "Time savers" are those that save time on mundane activities of workable time lengths. Ratings guides do much more than that. Considering almost none of us, including myself, have even close to the time necessary to actually count out every card on the set. So, the ratings guides give their user information they most likely never would have gotten without them. And, as I said before, counting out the cards doesn't guarantee one would count them out correctly.
Your acknowledging people might not count them out correctly perfectly supports my point. The ratings guide provide a service guaranteeing they'll be counted out correctly for those who can't...even though very few of us have the time to count out a whole set.
So, the ratings guide do give helpful, vital information that give their users an edge they most likely wouldn't have had without them. I don't know why people who actually pay for that edge try to say they didn't. I'm not saying it's unfair in anyway. Let's get back to Starlin Castro.