Sandwich wrote:Not sure anyone has pointed this out, but the main benefit I can see of adding leagues to the NAF database is this: game statistics.
Currently it records a bunch of tournament results, which are almost entirely between teams of equal (or very similar) TV. But with leagues, you'll get a bigger spread of TV differences.
So if leagues are added, suddenly we get a much bigger set of data when wanting to do things like play-testing teams (Khorne anyone?), or when whining about how team X is overpowered
Great post Sandwich!
Indigo wrote:
Tourneys are the best, most standardised means of assessing team balance we have and even they have massive, fundamental flaws which ultimately limits their usefulness as a balance gauge.
I don't think this is true at all, unless the rule book is rewritten for tournament play only. There are leagues out there that don't use in game house rules, these are the best resource we have for perpetual play roster balance IMO, not tournaments. Can tournaments show the casualty number skew of CLPOMB? Nor one that i have seen, maybe there is one that allows three skills on one player, but I've never seen it. Only perpetual league play, with a minimum of house rules, will show that there is a problem with that combination. Just look for yourself:
http://www.thunderbowl.ca/tbsn/index.ph ... v_bh&dir=d
Thunderbowl uses no in game house rules, and three of the top 4 casualty leaders all have the CLPOMB combo.
1) Y2J with 1.42 cas per game
2) Jehovah Joe with cas .94 per game
4) Syphilis with with cas .92 per game
This is just one example, but there are a lot more, where perpetual league play can provide a different and more useful insight to the long term racial balance.
I don't think any tournament could expose those numbers. Not to mention the wildly varying rules from tournament to tournament that would further flaw the numbers that you have already admitted have "massive, fundamental flaws which ultimately limits their usefulness as a balance gauge." Remember the NAF number include games that aren't even Blood Bowl, there's street bowl and Deathbowl and even one of the majors is settled by a variant game (Dungeonbowl).
During the last TD election I pointed out how important an asset having a database of info like this would be to the NAF, of course an Internet Blood Bowl pod casting star mocked me for saying that getting such records under the NAF umbrella would be a huge gift that would put the NAF in a unique position when or rather if any other editions of the LRB were produced.
Again, I don't want to come off as bashing the tournament scene, It's great, but it is functionally useless as a data set for anything to do with the rules as they are currently mandated, for league play.
Another important point to remember when talking about balancing the races is the fact that some teams do outstanding at low (110) TV and suffer as the TV goes up, like Wood elves or Amazons and the converse is also true when it come to Chaos, Ogres and High Elves. Can tournaments show this? Not the way that they are currently set up as a 110 TV base from what I can see.
If the NAF were able to have a tool to sanction and track league play from all over the world the benefits from the mountain of data would put in a very unique position when it came to the future of the LRB rule set.
Step on in this process is to appoint a "League Director" and let him/her start on the herculean task of building the program to put the NAF on the track to sanctioned league play. S.
Outstanding painting. Spike 2009!