No, the rule for games is that your opponent is supposed to have fun. The underlying assumption is that your opponent is playing a game because he is looking for a challenge with no real personal risk. That's what a game is. You are supposed to offer him that challenge, and to be gracious to him when he does the same for you. Denying your opponent that opportunity just because he's using legal tactics you don't like is petty. I'm not advocating pettiness in the face of pettiness, but I'll admit that I've done it before.Asperon Thorn wrote:No the rule for games is that "You are suppose to have fun."
I don't play online games. I also don't play quitters. I used to have some really bad gaming habits, and I've learned, and I'm working to build my crowd of coaches with me. Doing that involves encouraging those who want to get better to do so from within a framework of sportsmanship and friendly competitiveness. Nothing wrecks that like when a veteran coach gives up on the game before it's over. It's one thing when a rookie does it, but I'd only stall on a rookie if he seemed to be enjoying the challenge of trying to crack me. That good coach with the scary Skaven team with 2 Babes, 3 GRs and a RO in the KO bin, no, he's taking the stall, and if he doesn't like it, well, I expect him to understand that he'd do the same to me in a heartbeat.In this day and age with the advent of computers and the interweb, I am not particularly surprised that more and more antisocial people try and take social games and hide behind strategies.
I disagree. If the rules tilt the game your way, then your opponents should play the way you do. Oh, and if that's true, and if it feels like there should be other ways to do it but there just aren't (and I don't think that's true here), then you should take it up with the rulebook.It would hardly seem fun (for me or my opponents) if I powergamed and always used the best strategies to protect my team and dominate over everyone. . . .
See, to me it's fun to get stalled on. For one thing, stalling on me seldom works, because I know the various strategies to beat it with any team I play. Once in awhile it does, probably about as often as I do it myself. For another thing, if my opponent stalls on me, it's because he needs to make the most of his temporary leg up, so there's sort of a bittersweet satisfaction in it. For a third thing, I've got dozens of 0-1, 1-2 and 2-3 losses under my belt, but I've only lost by more than one point five times. I want to keep it that way.
I know a lot of people hate the answer "play better," but the truth of the matter is that stalling as a strategy has a place on the great web of BB strategy, and that place is not at the top in some clearly dominant position. If stall teams dominate your league, that's coincidence. So, yeah, it's one thing if the problem is, "my opponent runs the only good strategy and that strategy doesn't work for me." Then the answer would be "quit." But that's not what's happening. What's happening is that you have an aesthetic problem with an established-but-beatable strategy. There are two good ways to deal with it. You can suck it up, or you can learn to beat it.