On March 15 2014 19:47 Dingodile wrote:
Hyun lost vs hero was the biggest upset here. I expected a easy 3-0 for hyun
Hyun lost vs hero was the biggest upset here. I expected a easy 3-0 for hyun
What? herO is better than HyuN...
Forum Index > SC2 General |
TheDwf
France19747 Posts
On March 15 2014 19:47 Dingodile wrote: Hyun lost vs hero was the biggest upset here. I expected a easy 3-0 for hyun What? herO is better than HyuN... | ||
Dingodile
4131 Posts
On March 15 2014 19:59 TheDwf wrote: Show nested quote + On March 15 2014 19:47 Dingodile wrote: Hyun lost vs hero was the biggest upset here. I expected a easy 3-0 for hyun What? herO is better than HyuN... well without mutas it looked very likely a 3-0. He threw all his 3 games as i said three "own goal". My opinion is that mutas are very bad except in a scenario where you can build 50mutas at once. | ||
vult
United States9395 Posts
| ||
MagnuMizer
Denmark384 Posts
| ||
StarDraKe
France65 Posts
| ||
Dingodile
4131 Posts
On March 15 2014 21:52 MagnuMizer wrote: wow NaNiwa being booed at on stage on his birthday.. what a way to go in under age you care about brithdays, but if you are full aged... I hate every birthday since i am full aged. | ||
Bogeyman
Sweden307 Posts
On March 15 2014 15:13 DaftFunk wrote: Show nested quote + On March 15 2014 15:03 sumsaR wrote: On March 15 2014 10:18 for_the_swarm wrote: i dont get it. Even if the players could hear the casters, the koreans barely understand english. And if it was the crowd cheering during the proxy, was Naniwa planning on proxying every single game like WCS? why not finish the series and lose your chance at 100k$ ? It's not about understanding casters. It's hearing the audience and their reactions. If it's in the beginning of the game and you can suddenly hear the crowd excited, when usually nothing's supposed to be happening, there's something up — leading you to check for hidden stuff, or something. It's common enough. Hell, some players have even said they've intentionally not looked for something after they've heard the audience get excited, for fear of appearing to be cheating by acting on that knowledge. It's a similar situation in Dota 2. Alliance, having pulled some crazy and unexpected level 1 Roshans (the first one at the Dreamhack lan — the only one at a lan to date), have said in recent interviews that they refrain from using similar tactics at lans nowadays due to a suddenly excited crowd tipping their opponents off. Soundproofing is a real problem in situations where the reactions of an audience can tip you off to something happening. except its already been proven on reddit that polt scouts that position in all his tvp's and if you even watch the clip he queued the scv to go that way before the audience gave any loud OOOHHH and it still doesnt excuse him to forfeit 2+ games because of that. soundproofing is a real issue but in this game the outcome would have been the same regardless Well we can't know that for sure, but I'm inclined to believe that it's more likely that Polt would have scouted it regardless. It's not terribly important to me though, unless I'm absolutely certain. Even then, when judging the actions of another the more important matter is the perspective of the people involved. Here's the perspective of Naniwa: Now we can of course doubt his sincerity, but I would argue that if anything he has shown throughout his career to be sincere to the point of disregarding his own best, much like he has now. So given his perspective, how would we describe his actions? I would say he tired of putting up with what he would probably look at as appalling, game-breaking conditions. Under normal circumstances, maybe he would endure it and play out the series, but here he is on his birthday (it might matter to him) and potentially last day of his SC2 career, and as he is proxying his gateway he can (allegedly) hear the casters commentate his actions. Knowing Polt speaks pretty good English, and probably understands it better than he speaks it, Naniwa is reasonably safe to assume that Polt also hears it and knows what is going on. This makes me wonder what his thought-process was when he was doing the proxy, if he was then able to hear the casters already or already being able to assess that if they spoke up a little bit he would hear it clearly. Maybe he refused to change his game-plan after realizing he could hear the casters (it is the first game after all, and he likely already planned out the series vs Polt). That's certainly a respectable position to take. It's all speculation though, but all that means is we can't judge him on the basis "what if he just wanted to be a douche?". Now the other entity being judged in this thread seems to be the crowd. But come on people, a base level of empathy and experience being in a crowd should enable you to understand the situation and realize that of course the crowd would react like that. You just need to calm down and think for a moment. With Redeye, Kaelaris and ToD voicing their disappointment (quite reasonably so), the air is equally full of disappointment. When Naniwa walks out, a character who "a lot" (it's hard to quantify) of people already despise, of course they boo. All this drama... To me the only drama is, if the soundproofing is this bad in the scene in general, why is there no continually ongoing discussion about this until it is resolved? Why are players not constantly complaining about it? Sure the discussions pop up when something happens, but to use a Swedish reference I'd say we need to go "Uppdrag Granskning" (i.e. real investigative journalism) on this matter. Unless this actually isn't an issue, we should have something like a Blizzard-led soundproofing organization who send observers to any (big) tournament that gives WCS points, and if the soundproofing is lacking then primarily they try to resolve it and if that's not possible then no WCS points are awarded from that tournament. It would suck in the short-term for players, but in the long-term tournaments would have to adjust. I mean, either this or something similar has to happen. | ||
Zeze
Norway41 Posts
[QUOTE]On March 15 2014 15:13 DaftFunk wrote: [QUOTE]On March 15 2014 15:03 sumsaR wrote: [QUOTE]On March 15 2014 10:18 for_the_swarm wrote: All this drama... To me the only drama is, if the soundproofing is this bad in the scene in general, why is there no continually ongoing discussion about this until it is resolved? Why are players not constantly complaining about it?[/QUOTE] You wanna take a stab in the dark as to why there is no upror about it? Maybe because there is not a problem? According to the producers they asked every other player, and everyone including the LOL players said there was no problem. So is it Naniwa lying or everyone else? | ||
Bogeyman
Sweden307 Posts
On March 16 2014 00:07 Zeze wrote: You wanna take a stab in the dark as to why there is no upror about it? Maybe because there is not a problem? According to the producers they asked every other player, and everyone including the LOL players said there was no problem. So is it Naniwa lying or everyone else? Hey that may well be the case. I'd really like to know for sure though. | ||
Koshi
Belgium38797 Posts
I ragequitted the stream after the second game. | ||
milcz
Poland14 Posts
+ Show Spoiler + | ||
dbssaber
United States193 Posts
It sure looked painful though... | ||
pieroog
Poland146 Posts
Now the other entity being judged in this thread seems to be the crowd. But come on people, a base level of empathy and experience being in a crowd should enable you to understand the situation and realize that of course the crowd would react like that. You just need to calm down and think for a moment. With Redeye, Kaelaris and ToD voicing their disappointment (quite reasonably so), the air is equally full of disappointment. When Naniwa walks out, a character who "a lot" (it's hard to quantify) of people already despise, of course they boo. ....despise? we were cheering for him like mad - I was there man, EVERYBODY clapped when he entered the stage. BUT when he walked away, wasting a lot time and NOT EVEN SAY "GOODBYE" ... what he's done when some people started to boo? He yawned. A big disrespect toward your opponent, IEM and the several-thousand-people there - if you ask me. Even in GSL they have such problems - isn't too good for him either? And if you check my previous post - the sound was from LOL (first blood) | ||
Bogeyman
Sweden307 Posts
On March 16 2014 07:23 pieroog wrote: Show nested quote + Now the other entity being judged in this thread seems to be the crowd. But come on people, a base level of empathy and experience being in a crowd should enable you to understand the situation and realize that of course the crowd would react like that. You just need to calm down and think for a moment. With Redeye, Kaelaris and ToD voicing their disappointment (quite reasonably so), the air is equally full of disappointment. When Naniwa walks out, a character who "a lot" (it's hard to quantify) of people already despise, of course they boo. ....despise? we were cheering for him like mad - I was there man, EVERYBODY clapped when he entered the stage. BUT when he walked away, wasting a lot time and NOT EVEN SAY "GOODBYE" ... what he's done when some people started to boo? He yawned. A big disrespect toward your opponent, IEM and the several-thousand-people there - if you ask me. Even in GSL they have such problems - isn't too good for him either? And if you check my previous post - the sound was from LOL (first blood) Well, I guess I wasn't being clear enough. I meant "a lot" of people in general despise him, and so there was a high likelihood of there being some in the crowd as well. And it's also just the fact that "a lot" of people view him that way, it makes it easier for everyone else to adopt a similar attitude. The booing may well not even have anything to do with that though, it's also quite reasonable that people were just disappointed, as they still had hopes that he might do well or at least show good games or whatever each and everyone wanted out of it, so of course they were disappointed when they didn't get that. I'm not sure if my message is coming through clearly enough, but I hope you get what I'm saying. I didn't know he yawned at the crowd when they booed him, but it seems like a pretty likely reaction from him. He must have been in a pretty shitty mood already, so of course the booing would stir up some emotions. It seems like a dickish thing to do, but I always (almost) find a way to look at the flip-side of things. The crowd is mocking him, so he's mocking them back. Seems reasonable (though not necessarily very mature). And just because other people put up with something doesn't mean one specific individual also has to. He's not necessarily thinking of himself as better than anyone else, maybe he just can't stand it regardless of what other people do or think of it. Lastly, you're speaking of the crowd going wild and making a lot of noise over first blood in LoL. Is this the thing that Naniwa thought made Polt check for proxies? Polt might have thought the same, so where the sound came from is still irrelevant. And again, even so it doesn't even have to be a matter of the crowd making noise. Naniwa said he and Polt both could hear the casters themselves, and they spoke quite clearly about the proxy as it was going on, way before Polt sent the scout. These things don't mean anything certain, so I'm not saying "Polt heard the casters and therefore sent the scout". As I said earlier, I don't even think it changed his play (but it might have, I don't know). But you can't deny Naniwa the right to take a stance against these conditions. I too wish he could do it with more style, but I somehow respect the bluntness of his actions. If I wanted to, I could do the exact same thing, only I would do it looking like the victim, being apologetic and polite, remorseful. But would I be any better than Naniwa? I don't think so. And I certainly don't think Naniwa would be a better person if he suppressed his true feelings just to be less controversial. He would be easier to deal with though. | ||
Baarn
United States2702 Posts
On March 15 2014 23:43 Bogeyman wrote: Show nested quote + On March 15 2014 15:13 DaftFunk wrote: On March 15 2014 15:03 sumsaR wrote: On March 15 2014 10:18 for_the_swarm wrote: i dont get it. Even if the players could hear the casters, the koreans barely understand english. And if it was the crowd cheering during the proxy, was Naniwa planning on proxying every single game like WCS? why not finish the series and lose your chance at 100k$ ? It's not about understanding casters. It's hearing the audience and their reactions. If it's in the beginning of the game and you can suddenly hear the crowd excited, when usually nothing's supposed to be happening, there's something up — leading you to check for hidden stuff, or something. It's common enough. Hell, some players have even said they've intentionally not looked for something after they've heard the audience get excited, for fear of appearing to be cheating by acting on that knowledge. It's a similar situation in Dota 2. Alliance, having pulled some crazy and unexpected level 1 Roshans (the first one at the Dreamhack lan — the only one at a lan to date), have said in recent interviews that they refrain from using similar tactics at lans nowadays due to a suddenly excited crowd tipping their opponents off. Soundproofing is a real problem in situations where the reactions of an audience can tip you off to something happening. except its already been proven on reddit that polt scouts that position in all his tvp's and if you even watch the clip he queued the scv to go that way before the audience gave any loud OOOHHH and it still doesnt excuse him to forfeit 2+ games because of that. soundproofing is a real issue but in this game the outcome would have been the same regardless Well we can't know that for sure, but I'm inclined to believe that it's more likely that Polt would have scouted it regardless. It's not terribly important to me though, unless I'm absolutely certain. Even then, when judging the actions of another the more important matter is the perspective of the people involved. Here's the perspective of Naniwa: https://twitter.com/NaNiwaSC2/statuses/444651159488593920 Now we can of course doubt his sincerity, but I would argue that if anything he has shown throughout his career to be sincere to the point of disregarding his own best, much like he has now. So given his perspective, how would we describe his actions? I would say he tired of putting up with what he would probably look at as appalling, game-breaking conditions. Under normal circumstances, maybe he would endure it and play out the series, but here he is on his birthday (it might matter to him) and potentially last day of his SC2 career, and as he is proxying his gateway he can (allegedly) hear the casters commentate his actions. Knowing Polt speaks pretty good English, and probably understands it better than he speaks it, Naniwa is reasonably safe to assume that Polt also hears it and knows what is going on. This makes me wonder what his thought-process was when he was doing the proxy, if he was then able to hear the casters already or already being able to assess that if they spoke up a little bit he would hear it clearly. Maybe he refused to change his game-plan after realizing he could hear the casters (it is the first game after all, and he likely already planned out the series vs Polt). That's certainly a respectable position to take. It's all speculation though, but all that means is we can't judge him on the basis "what if he just wanted to be a douche?". Now the other entity being judged in this thread seems to be the crowd. But come on people, a base level of empathy and experience being in a crowd should enable you to understand the situation and realize that of course the crowd would react like that. You just need to calm down and think for a moment. With Redeye, Kaelaris and ToD voicing their disappointment (quite reasonably so), the air is equally full of disappointment. When Naniwa walks out, a character who "a lot" (it's hard to quantify) of people already despise, of course they boo. All this drama... To me the only drama is, if the soundproofing is this bad in the scene in general, why is there no continually ongoing discussion about this until it is resolved? Why are players not constantly complaining about it? Sure the discussions pop up when something happens, but to use a Swedish reference I'd say we need to go "Uppdrag Granskning" (i.e. real investigative journalism) on this matter. Unless this actually isn't an issue, we should have something like a Blizzard-led soundproofing organization who send observers to any (big) tournament that gives WCS points, and if the soundproofing is lacking then primarily they try to resolve it and if that's not possible then no WCS points are awarded from that tournament. It would suck in the short-term for players, but in the long-term tournaments would have to adjust. I mean, either this or something similar has to happen. You can't do much about it? So why is there a need for a continually ongoing discussion to fix something you can't fix. IEM wants to sell as many live tickets as possible. Spodek has a maximum capacity of 11,500. In order to not have the crowd distract the players you'd basically have to move them in the basement or off the property to have complete silence. This would pose the problem that when you go to a live event you have an expectation to actually see the players live in front of you. Would you bother going if you only saw the players on tv screens as they played in a different area? You'd just stay home like everyone else? I really don't think there is more to it than this to discuss at this point or even bother discussing further at all. | ||
Bogeyman
Sweden307 Posts
On March 16 2014 10:39 Baarn wrote: Show nested quote + On March 15 2014 23:43 Bogeyman wrote: On March 15 2014 15:13 DaftFunk wrote: On March 15 2014 15:03 sumsaR wrote: On March 15 2014 10:18 for_the_swarm wrote: i dont get it. Even if the players could hear the casters, the koreans barely understand english. And if it was the crowd cheering during the proxy, was Naniwa planning on proxying every single game like WCS? why not finish the series and lose your chance at 100k$ ? It's not about understanding casters. It's hearing the audience and their reactions. If it's in the beginning of the game and you can suddenly hear the crowd excited, when usually nothing's supposed to be happening, there's something up — leading you to check for hidden stuff, or something. It's common enough. Hell, some players have even said they've intentionally not looked for something after they've heard the audience get excited, for fear of appearing to be cheating by acting on that knowledge. It's a similar situation in Dota 2. Alliance, having pulled some crazy and unexpected level 1 Roshans (the first one at the Dreamhack lan — the only one at a lan to date), have said in recent interviews that they refrain from using similar tactics at lans nowadays due to a suddenly excited crowd tipping their opponents off. Soundproofing is a real problem in situations where the reactions of an audience can tip you off to something happening. except its already been proven on reddit that polt scouts that position in all his tvp's and if you even watch the clip he queued the scv to go that way before the audience gave any loud OOOHHH and it still doesnt excuse him to forfeit 2+ games because of that. soundproofing is a real issue but in this game the outcome would have been the same regardless Well we can't know that for sure, but I'm inclined to believe that it's more likely that Polt would have scouted it regardless. It's not terribly important to me though, unless I'm absolutely certain. Even then, when judging the actions of another the more important matter is the perspective of the people involved. Here's the perspective of Naniwa: https://twitter.com/NaNiwaSC2/statuses/444651159488593920 Now we can of course doubt his sincerity, but I would argue that if anything he has shown throughout his career to be sincere to the point of disregarding his own best, much like he has now. So given his perspective, how would we describe his actions? I would say he tired of putting up with what he would probably look at as appalling, game-breaking conditions. Under normal circumstances, maybe he would endure it and play out the series, but here he is on his birthday (it might matter to him) and potentially last day of his SC2 career, and as he is proxying his gateway he can (allegedly) hear the casters commentate his actions. Knowing Polt speaks pretty good English, and probably understands it better than he speaks it, Naniwa is reasonably safe to assume that Polt also hears it and knows what is going on. This makes me wonder what his thought-process was when he was doing the proxy, if he was then able to hear the casters already or already being able to assess that if they spoke up a little bit he would hear it clearly. Maybe he refused to change his game-plan after realizing he could hear the casters (it is the first game after all, and he likely already planned out the series vs Polt). That's certainly a respectable position to take. It's all speculation though, but all that means is we can't judge him on the basis "what if he just wanted to be a douche?". Now the other entity being judged in this thread seems to be the crowd. But come on people, a base level of empathy and experience being in a crowd should enable you to understand the situation and realize that of course the crowd would react like that. You just need to calm down and think for a moment. With Redeye, Kaelaris and ToD voicing their disappointment (quite reasonably so), the air is equally full of disappointment. When Naniwa walks out, a character who "a lot" (it's hard to quantify) of people already despise, of course they boo. All this drama... To me the only drama is, if the soundproofing is this bad in the scene in general, why is there no continually ongoing discussion about this until it is resolved? Why are players not constantly complaining about it? Sure the discussions pop up when something happens, but to use a Swedish reference I'd say we need to go "Uppdrag Granskning" (i.e. real investigative journalism) on this matter. Unless this actually isn't an issue, we should have something like a Blizzard-led soundproofing organization who send observers to any (big) tournament that gives WCS points, and if the soundproofing is lacking then primarily they try to resolve it and if that's not possible then no WCS points are awarded from that tournament. It would suck in the short-term for players, but in the long-term tournaments would have to adjust. I mean, either this or something similar has to happen. You can't do much about it? So why is there a need for a continually ongoing discussion to fix something you can't fix. IEM wants to sell as many live tickets as possible. Spodek has a maximum capacity of 11,500. In order to not have the crowd distract the players you'd basically have to move them in the basement or off the property to have complete silence. This would pose the problem that when you go to a live event you have an expectation to actually see the players live in front of you. Would you bother going if you only saw the players on tv screens as they played in a different area? You'd just stay home like everyone else? I really don't think there is more to it than this to discuss at this point or even bother discussing further at all. I think you're just straight up wrong on this one. I might be wrong, but I doubt it. There certainly are things to be done. You remember the incident with SKT_Rain? I recommend you read through the "responses from the community" in the OP: http://www.teamliquid.net/forum/starcraft-2/442794-soundproofing-continues-to-be-an-issue-in-gom-studio | ||
Baarn
United States2702 Posts
On March 16 2014 14:10 Bogeyman wrote: Show nested quote + On March 16 2014 10:39 Baarn wrote: On March 15 2014 23:43 Bogeyman wrote: On March 15 2014 15:13 DaftFunk wrote: On March 15 2014 15:03 sumsaR wrote: On March 15 2014 10:18 for_the_swarm wrote: i dont get it. Even if the players could hear the casters, the koreans barely understand english. And if it was the crowd cheering during the proxy, was Naniwa planning on proxying every single game like WCS? why not finish the series and lose your chance at 100k$ ? It's not about understanding casters. It's hearing the audience and their reactions. If it's in the beginning of the game and you can suddenly hear the crowd excited, when usually nothing's supposed to be happening, there's something up — leading you to check for hidden stuff, or something. It's common enough. Hell, some players have even said they've intentionally not looked for something after they've heard the audience get excited, for fear of appearing to be cheating by acting on that knowledge. It's a similar situation in Dota 2. Alliance, having pulled some crazy and unexpected level 1 Roshans (the first one at the Dreamhack lan — the only one at a lan to date), have said in recent interviews that they refrain from using similar tactics at lans nowadays due to a suddenly excited crowd tipping their opponents off. Soundproofing is a real problem in situations where the reactions of an audience can tip you off to something happening. except its already been proven on reddit that polt scouts that position in all his tvp's and if you even watch the clip he queued the scv to go that way before the audience gave any loud OOOHHH and it still doesnt excuse him to forfeit 2+ games because of that. soundproofing is a real issue but in this game the outcome would have been the same regardless Well we can't know that for sure, but I'm inclined to believe that it's more likely that Polt would have scouted it regardless. It's not terribly important to me though, unless I'm absolutely certain. Even then, when judging the actions of another the more important matter is the perspective of the people involved. Here's the perspective of Naniwa: https://twitter.com/NaNiwaSC2/statuses/444651159488593920 Now we can of course doubt his sincerity, but I would argue that if anything he has shown throughout his career to be sincere to the point of disregarding his own best, much like he has now. So given his perspective, how would we describe his actions? I would say he tired of putting up with what he would probably look at as appalling, game-breaking conditions. Under normal circumstances, maybe he would endure it and play out the series, but here he is on his birthday (it might matter to him) and potentially last day of his SC2 career, and as he is proxying his gateway he can (allegedly) hear the casters commentate his actions. Knowing Polt speaks pretty good English, and probably understands it better than he speaks it, Naniwa is reasonably safe to assume that Polt also hears it and knows what is going on. This makes me wonder what his thought-process was when he was doing the proxy, if he was then able to hear the casters already or already being able to assess that if they spoke up a little bit he would hear it clearly. Maybe he refused to change his game-plan after realizing he could hear the casters (it is the first game after all, and he likely already planned out the series vs Polt). That's certainly a respectable position to take. It's all speculation though, but all that means is we can't judge him on the basis "what if he just wanted to be a douche?". Now the other entity being judged in this thread seems to be the crowd. But come on people, a base level of empathy and experience being in a crowd should enable you to understand the situation and realize that of course the crowd would react like that. You just need to calm down and think for a moment. With Redeye, Kaelaris and ToD voicing their disappointment (quite reasonably so), the air is equally full of disappointment. When Naniwa walks out, a character who "a lot" (it's hard to quantify) of people already despise, of course they boo. All this drama... To me the only drama is, if the soundproofing is this bad in the scene in general, why is there no continually ongoing discussion about this until it is resolved? Why are players not constantly complaining about it? Sure the discussions pop up when something happens, but to use a Swedish reference I'd say we need to go "Uppdrag Granskning" (i.e. real investigative journalism) on this matter. Unless this actually isn't an issue, we should have something like a Blizzard-led soundproofing organization who send observers to any (big) tournament that gives WCS points, and if the soundproofing is lacking then primarily they try to resolve it and if that's not possible then no WCS points are awarded from that tournament. It would suck in the short-term for players, but in the long-term tournaments would have to adjust. I mean, either this or something similar has to happen. You can't do much about it? So why is there a need for a continually ongoing discussion to fix something you can't fix. IEM wants to sell as many live tickets as possible. Spodek has a maximum capacity of 11,500. In order to not have the crowd distract the players you'd basically have to move them in the basement or off the property to have complete silence. This would pose the problem that when you go to a live event you have an expectation to actually see the players live in front of you. Would you bother going if you only saw the players on tv screens as they played in a different area? You'd just stay home like everyone else? I really don't think there is more to it than this to discuss at this point or even bother discussing further at all. I think you're just straight up wrong on this one. I might be wrong, but I doubt it. There certainly are things to be done. You remember the incident with SKT_Rain? I recommend you read through the "responses from the community" in the OP: http://www.teamliquid.net/forum/starcraft-2/442794-soundproofing-continues-to-be-an-issue-in-gom-studio You're welcome to disagree with me all you want but the fact still is you can't do much to control audience noise outside of punishing the audience in one form or the other. Imagine being in centurylink field without hearing protection. Progamers have it good in comparison. You can throw all the money and ideas you want it at this. When you start adding more audience everything you did can and will go down the toilet at some point. It's kinda funny you want me to go back and reread a thread I posted in when it was relevant. I'm stating the same things here I stated there. This thread has already been solved anyway a page or so ago. Polt scouts that position out of habit (see: many many games). So it's completely plausible if he heard the audience or not he would still check to see if anything was going on in that part of the map. So I wouldn't take Naniwa's rage quit as a sign Polt got an unfair advantage from the audience. | ||
pieroog
Poland146 Posts
On March 16 2014 08:56 Bogeyman wrote: Show nested quote + On March 16 2014 07:23 pieroog wrote: Now the other entity being judged in this thread seems to be the crowd. But come on people, a base level of empathy and experience being in a crowd should enable you to understand the situation and realize that of course the crowd would react like that. You just need to calm down and think for a moment. With Redeye, Kaelaris and ToD voicing their disappointment (quite reasonably so), the air is equally full of disappointment. When Naniwa walks out, a character who "a lot" (it's hard to quantify) of people already despise, of course they boo. ....despise? we were cheering for him like mad - I was there man, EVERYBODY clapped when he entered the stage. BUT when he walked away, wasting a lot time and NOT EVEN SAY "GOODBYE" ... what he's done when some people started to boo? He yawned. A big disrespect toward your opponent, IEM and the several-thousand-people there - if you ask me. Even in GSL they have such problems - isn't too good for him either? And if you check my previous post - the sound was from LOL (first blood) Well, I guess I wasn't being clear enough. I meant "a lot" of people in general despise him, and so there was a high likelihood of there being some in the crowd as well. And it's also just the fact that "a lot" of people view him that way, it makes it easier for everyone else to adopt a similar attitude. The booing may well not even have anything to do with that though, it's also quite reasonable that people were just disappointed, as they still had hopes that he might do well or at least show good games or whatever each and everyone wanted out of it, so of course they were disappointed when they didn't get that. I'm not sure if my message is coming through clearly enough, but I hope you get what I'm saying. I didn't know he yawned at the crowd when they booed him, but it seems like a pretty likely reaction from him. He must have been in a pretty shitty mood already, so of course the booing would stir up some emotions. It seems like a dickish thing to do, but I always (almost) find a way to look at the flip-side of things. The crowd is mocking him, so he's mocking them back. Seems reasonable (though not necessarily very mature). And just because other people put up with something doesn't mean one specific individual also has to. He's not necessarily thinking of himself as better than anyone else, maybe he just can't stand it regardless of what other people do or think of it. Well I do agree with you on many levels, but still this is a huge tournament, with a huge prize in front of huge audience. And since this dude is a PRO I'm entitled to require a professional behaviour from him, especially sitting 10m away and seeing details. He admitted he hadn't played so much recently, he admitted he doesn't care as much as before. If I was him - I'd forfeit earlier and "give" my place to someone that does care and works hard to achieve more. I understand the issue and nerves, but I think it is impossible to 100% isolate the sound since my chair was trembling from the power of the sound, his booth would resonate as well, "basement placement" isn't an option to me Imho - he chose to forfeit this way instead of being 3-0'ed. I still love Naniwa's as a player, but after that "exhibition" of childish behaviour and disrespect to his fans - I'm afraid I don't like him any more as a whole package. And that's on him. And yes, I felt very disappointed. | ||
veilchen
13 Posts
Show the games on the screen time-displaced. About 2-3 mins would probably be enough to resolve the 'cheering crowd' and 'friend sits in the audience and gives hints to the player' problem. And 3 mins wouldn't hurt the crowd at all.# I'm a genius, | ||
Hondelul
1999 Posts
On March 17 2014 00:40 veilchen wrote: Soundproof + Signs in the audience Problems: Show the games on the screen time-displaced. About 2-3 mins would probably be enough to resolve the 'cheering crowd' and 'friend sits in the audience and gives hints to the player' problem. And 3 mins wouldn't hurt the crowd at all.# I'm a genius, Tense battle on the screen, suddenly in the booth one player jumps up and down celebrating, going out of his booth. Match still running on the screen for 3 minutes. Well, a bit of a downer ^^ Otherwise this would work ok I guess. | ||
| ||
StarCraft: Brood War Pusan 829 Dota 2PianO 330 Larva 287 NotJumperer 128 JulyZerg 102 ajuk12(nOOB) 29 GoRush 28 Terrorterran 18 Shinee 15 Bale 6 [ Show more ] League of Legends Counter-Strike Heroes of the Storm Other Games Organizations
StarCraft 2 • practicex 78 StarCraft: Brood War• Adnapsc2 12 • AfreecaTV YouTube • intothetv • Kozan • IndyKCrew • LaughNgamezSOOP • Laughngamez YouTube • Migwel • sooper7s Dota 2 League of Legends Other Games |
Master's Coliseum
Maru vs GuMiho
Lancer vs GuMiho
herO vs Maru
CranKy Ducklings
Defiler Tour
CranKy Ducklings
OSC
OSC
OSC
OSC
|
|