GonFreeces31 wrote:I think lots of empirical evidence is needed to warrant an "over-powered" claim. I also think most of the complaints in this thread were about tidal, Faytis, and Mediator SS. I don't think Jewel is OP at all, but if Logress shows RP data suggesting that it IS OP, then I would believe you guys.
OR, if someone wants to show a side by side comparison of a traditional cath open to a Jewel open and show how Jewel is strictly better, I'd love to see that too.
You know what? I love how you guys talk up a big game about "if the data shows it", but when push comes to shove, Logress is an English major, you're a squishy psych PhD, Romdeau has a BS in that as well, and generally, the whole balance team is crap at data analysis and math (unless imortal is still around, but I have reason to be skeptical of him as well). The creator of M:tG, Richard Garfield, when he was creating it, was pursuing a PhD in UPenn in computational combinatorics, or some other crazy, off the wall graduate-level math, and so were some of his collaborators (I spoke to one once upon a time who helped him out and was getting a PhD in physics at UPenn).
Long story short? Even if you guys had the data, you wouldn't know what to do with it, and nor do I think you have the proper metrics to know what to do with it. There's a reason the erratas have been consistent failures--that is, they patch up the current set, until the next one comes out, and the environment is same crap, different cards. At the end of the day, the only common factor in all your failures is you. So yes, I'm calling you out, because you want to talk like you're a data expert, yet to my knowledge, everyone on the errata team just hasn't put in the time in learning data science/machine learning/etc. for me to take you seriously.
So in the meantime, I suggest you take the arguments in this thread with a bit more respect than you do, because what players experience is probably something they do a far better job articulating and pinpointing than you can with your half-hearted amateur data analysis skills.