Backfire wrote:To your point about you having more fun with the game than me, yes, that is true as I'm sure you do. I am having fun though but I want to have as much fun as possible and I want people like me, that are/were unhappy with the "conspiracies" to return to the game and I want new players to join. In essence, I want everyone to be happy. More than anything, I would love to be wrong about it all but I have now seen G.Mists and there is no turning back until Strat makes a public statement and ideally, admits that things are not always as they seem. I adamantly do not believe that these settings were accidentally left on in the past and I won't believe it if/when they get caught again in the future. The notion that these things happen unbeknownst to their team is very hard to believe, small company or not.
The thing about disproving a conspiracy is that the conspiracist will take every piece of evidence and use that to prove that the conspiracy exists. Strat has (apparently because it was before my time) admitted that an HR setting was set incorrectly. I was part of the discussion that figured out that the guarding lines effect seemed to be on. To do that, we identified specific pieces of data on multiple cards and showed that the only way that the outcomes could occur was if that particular setting was on. But now that Strat has admitted mistakes, you will believe that they are always lying because they...I dont know...admitted mistakes in the past?
This is where Hanlon's Razor comes in. Hanlon's razor says that "never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity". I have also seen it written as incompetence. In this case, "stupidity" or incompetence is having a mistake in the code. But you are jumping right past the possibility of an honest mistake to conspiracy.
Again, go back to the idea that this is a small company operating on a shoestring budget. Now with that in mind, weigh the likelihood that there was an incorrect piece of code versus a whole group of programmers all looking to develop an entirely second set of game cards with which they can manipulate game outcomes and working to cover their tracks by monitoring the boards.
Looking at what Frankie said, he is 100% right about the need for you to show proof of the alternative hypothesis. The company has said there is no conspiracy. The main piece of evidence you have is this one time appearance of an odd name which can be explained by much simpler things than a conspiracy, and the fact that players dont all do as poorly as you think they should when they join the site. But in my case, I had played strat for years before coming on to 365. I knew how to read a card, I knew how to judge ballpark effects and I knew the role of offense vs defense. Many people coming on to this site have that same background, and those that dont get crushed in their early leagues and dont come back.
Its on you to show that the game is fixed and, in my opinion, you have not even come close to meeting that bar.