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Moderator: Palmtana
Palmtana wrote:Steve F, thanks for your initiative.
Backfire, Steve F is bona fide. Scratch the validity of his reply from SOM concerning normalization (or statistical accuracy as djmacb quoted from the help file) off of your worry list.
Maxpower, given the topic I probably won't have to sticky this thread. But if it drops down the page I will do so.
I have no bone in the debate but, given SOM's statement, it would be interesting to hear from some of those who believe that normalization is turned on. If I'm not mistaken.....nevdully....salty....egvrich....
STEVE F wrote:I took the time to write to support and got an answer that satisfied me. I posted it here. If it doesn't satisfy you, write them yourself. I don't give a damn one way or the other.
Backfire wrote:I hope it is real
Backfire wrote:By the way you're talking here it seems that the notion of using a financially beneficial business model is a fairy tale to you.
Backfire wrote:pattern recognition is a skill
Backfire wrote:I believe tweaks are being made and more specifically, weaker players are being given unfair advantages to keep them as customers. This makes perfect business sense.
Backfire wrote:I can intuitively know what is going to happen in many cases. For example, I just got swept by one of the weaker teams in the league and missed playoffs due to a wildcard tiebreaker. I expected this to happen and I was right.
Palmtana wrote:it would be interesting to hear from some of those who believe that normalization is turned on
MaxPower wrote:Humans are absolute shit at pattern recognition and are always seeing patterns where none exist. You know who thinks they're really good at pattern recognition? Gamblers. Yet somehow the house always wins. Perceiving and tolerating chaos is the more valuable skill to cultivate.
djmacb wrote:Well OK, this has gone exactly the way Steve F predicted. Why am I not surprised? The lesson, as usual, is don’t feed the troll.
MaxPower wrote:Backfire wrote:I hope it is real
Do you though? Kinda seems like you don't. Kinda seems like you're weirdly invested in the idea that normalization exists and don't want to hear otherwise. Like, this man just posted a definitive answer to the "question" you supposedly were posing and somehow you're mad at him for it. He's just trying to give you good news my man, you should be grateful! We gotta take it where we can get it in this world.Backfire wrote:By the way you're talking here it seems that the notion of using a financially beneficial business model is a fairy tale to you.
1. implement normalization
2. lie about it
3. ...
4. profit???Backfire wrote:pattern recognition is a skill
Humans are absolute shit at pattern recognition and are always seeing patterns where none exist. You know who thinks they're really good at pattern recognition? Gamblers. Yet somehow the house always wins. Perceiving and tolerating chaos is the more valuable skill to cultivate.Backfire wrote:I believe tweaks are being made and more specifically, weaker players are being given unfair advantages to keep them as customers. This makes perfect business sense.
You have identified a potential profit motive for Strat intervening in the game results, what you (nor anyone else) have not done is explain how "normalization" - the topic of your original post - would favor new players.Backfire wrote:I can intuitively know what is going to happen in many cases. For example, I just got swept by one of the weaker teams in the league and missed playoffs due to a wildcard tiebreaker. I expected this to happen and I was right.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confirmation_biasPalmtana wrote:it would be interesting to hear from some of those who believe that normalization is turned on
Seems like we're already hearing from one of them...
Backfire wrote:So far I have seen proof that in the past there has been unknown factors at play and that there are those that believe such things may still be ongoing.
Backfire wrote:You asked me for proof that normalization exists
Backfire wrote:Poorly built teams seem to always, or almost always, get at least 50 wins. I doubt this is a hard rule but it seems to be happening far more than it should IMO. This is a game of small and large edges and one would think that if he stacks enough of these edges it would make for an extremely powerful team, while the opposite would also be true. Answer me this: Do you feel the game is so random that basically any team with whatever settings, lineups, etc the manager chooses should have an extremely high probability of getting 50 wins? I really don't think so but maybe you know something I don't.
MaxPower wrote:Backfire wrote:So far I have seen proof that in the past there has been unknown factors at play and that there are those that believe such things may still be ongoing.
Right so this is a great example of confirmation bias. In this thread you've had one guy tell you that normalization existed in the past, just reciting that without providing any evidence. Also in this thread you've had a guy tell you that he emailed Strat and they replied that normalization is not turned on. The first guy's comment you consider "proof" that normalization existed in the past. The other guy's comment you ask for further evidence and quite conspicuously do NOT consider it "proof" of no present-day normalization. The only difference in the two posts is that one fits your priors. In terms of evidentiary value they are essentially identical. Now take this dynamic and apply it to the entire list of "strange things" you've been noticing, and ask yourself how many times the opposite thing happened and you immediately discard/forget it because it doesn't fit your priors.Backfire wrote:You asked me for proof that normalization exists
I don't believe I did, I asked how normalization would benefit new players, still haven't heard that one spelled out.Backfire wrote:Poorly built teams seem to always, or almost always, get at least 50 wins. I doubt this is a hard rule but it seems to be happening far more than it should IMO. This is a game of small and large edges and one would think that if he stacks enough of these edges it would make for an extremely powerful team, while the opposite would also be true. Answer me this: Do you feel the game is so random that basically any team with whatever settings, lineups, etc the manager chooses should have an extremely high probability of getting 50 wins? I really don't think so but maybe you know something I don't.
MLB has no salary cap, yet teams rarely finish with fewer than 50 wins. Why then would we expect a different outcome in a game based on MLB but with a salary cap that enforces parity? Interestingly, 48 wins is replacement level in MLB. Ever hear the saying "every team wins 30% of their games and loses 30% of their games, it's what they do with the other 40% that matters"? Even before people understood the math behind replacement level, they understood the concept intuitively.
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