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ctown28
ctown28
Huntsman

Apr-16-2009 10:18

I wanted to start this thread to get some opinions from others in the community about the advantages that some players/agencies have over one another. I am not saying my thoughts on them are right or wrong nor am I saying that anybody else’s is. In fact, you may see me flip flop on the topics from time to time as I sometimes like to look at both sides.

What I do not want to see here is for this to turn into a flame war and/or any name calling. Remember, it doesn’t matter if you have been here for 10 days or 1000 days. Every opinion of someone that pays to play the game carries just as much weight as the next person.

A good debate can be healthy for the community and I ask you to all stay respectful here even if you disagree with something that is said here. I will start with some topics and would like to see them discussed and if anyone thinks I missed something or would like to add a topic, by all means go for it.



Replies

Makensie Brewer
Makensie Brewer
Super Steeper

Apr-17-2009 08:12

I also don't feel that holding a favor, is cheating. It is just a strategy used in hopes of getting ahead in the treasure hunt. Everyone can do it.

That is really what I am trying to say here. Everyone here has the same opportunities to get ahead. No matter how you choose to do it. It's just a matter of who has ambition to do it.

I guess I am just easy going about things lol Whatever strategy another detective uses, does not effect me in any way. I am a competitive person, but not so much on the high score list. I figure if I want to be where so and so is, I, too, can be there....I might not be there tomorrow, but, maybe one day I will, but it's not important to me anymore. It used to be :)

I just enjoy the game, play it.....and whatever everyone else is doing around, hey, so be it! Doesn't stop my game :)

That's it for now :)

Sleuth Sindy
Sleuth Sindy
Pinball Wizard

Apr-17-2009 16:27

Everyone keeps saying the High Scores lists don't matter - so why even have them? If no one cares about them, then obviously the solution is to simply not have them, then no one can complain about someone else climbing up them "unfairly."

Issue solved.

Ben, hit the delete button!!

Joseph Zeo
Joseph Zeo
Tale Spinner

Apr-17-2009 20:48

I personally use a Mac, so when Lolita told me about the Automatic Dr. Watson, it was disappointing to find out it's not Mac friendly (as the rest of the world is), but hey there's those out there that works with Safari. So, you just need to find one that matches your computer. All in all, it's just something to hasten the mundane part of scribbling things down, in the end you still need to use your logic and deduction, which is the fun part of the game. I'd say that these readily available programs HELP players to stay on with Sleuth, not discouraging people from playing.

There will be times when I'll be away into RL where i cannot play for over 1 month. I've flagged it up before joining an agency and gave my password for that purpose. My privacy has always been respected and the account is only used for the right purposes. I'm glad I trusted the right person. Cases are also shared in the same spirit, for those who have more time during certain seasons and less time in others.

Personally i've only pass by the High Scores lists once. To those who doesn't care, it's basically non existent. So to me, it doesn't matter if Ben hit the delete button or not. I however really enjoy playing with the agency; team work is amazing, helping each other out. I guess everyone's getting from Sleuth what they enjoy most :)

Ms Helen
Ms Helen
Con Artist

Apr-18-2009 03:40

I, like a lot of people use Pidgeots helper, I don't use it to gain an advantage I use it because I care about the environment and I was shocked by how much paper I was using. I could use notepad or similar but I hate clicking between different tabs/programmes. I don't feel like it gives me an adavantage it just does exactly what I would do on paper. The Vh helper, I can see why some would think this gives and advantage. However the same info could be found on many of the agency websites even though it's not automated, even so the 1 clue rule has been known by most since not long after Villain hunts were released. The case Solver, well, I was offered the use of this when Hug first made the program and I turned it down. It's not how I like to play, it may be annoying having to click many pages but that is after all part of the game. I then heard that it has the ability to solve a case for you. This I don't agree with for couple reasons. I think it takes away the point of the game, makes the the game less fun and gives and advantage over those who don't use it. Of course I don't always believe what I hear so I decided to look at it myself. It doesn't always solve cases for you but it CAN do. On top of this it does it very quickly, allowing for more cases to be solved in a normal amount of playing time. I've heard the arguments in favour of the helper but I will never be able to get on board with it.

I know other peoples passwords and a few in the past have known mine. I rarely use other peoples passwords unless they have asked me to do something for them. Likewise people haven't abused mine, if I'd found out they had done I would have said something and changed my password. Of course PMs are a different matter, it's possible that people have read my PMs and I know it has happened to others. In my mind if someone is sad enough to go read my private mail then I feel sorry for them. Now I have other reasons for not sharing my password so don't.

Ms Helen
Ms Helen
Con Artist

Apr-18-2009 03:40






I think it was Lolita who mentioned that password sharing was compulsary in certain agencies. It wouldn't surprise me it's happened in the past. I do believe that it's your own detective and you pay for it, no one has the right to make you give up your password.

Despite arguments about how many subs you can have in an agency, it is a rule even though it's not written down. Most people have abided by this rule over the years although there have been a few that haven't. Whether it is written down or not Ben stated it wasn't allowed and I personally respect Ben enough to follow the rule. I wouldn't go to another game and say a rule was wrong and should be changed so I'm certainly not going to do it when it's made in a game I already play. Yes it is true that Ben is more easy going than many game administrators around. Does it mean because he has trusted us with the honour system approach that we should abuse it? I personally don't think so. Of course without set rules there are always going to be people who will think otherwise.

I'm for and against this rule, I've respected it and will continue to do so whilst it's in place. Personally I'm not completely against allowing as many detectives in an agency as someone wants. Having said that I have a few concerns about it. There have been and always will be people who abuse it. Having 3 detectives fine, having 12 in an agency all your own, well, there's no doubt it gives you an advantage in THs. Another concern I have is the spirit of competition. I love working with others to finish a hunt espcially when it's a neck and neck competition. It must be boring to do a hunt completely on your own.

That leads me to detctives who you control but are not yours. In my opinion using other peoples characters because for whatever reason they are inactive is as bad as having an agency full of your own detectives. It all boils down to the same thing, you have an advantage in hunts.

Ms Helen
Ms Helen
Con Artist

Apr-18-2009 03:41

Case Sharing: To me this is a bit of a grey area. I have no problems with case sharing, that is one of the reasons the case files are there for. Feeding all the cases to one detective for whatever reason I'm not so sure about. I must admit I'm slightly confused by this, maybe someone who regularly plays 200+ cases can explain it to me. Cases themselves are the same over and over again. Now I'm assuming that people can find this becomes mundane after playing so many (please correct me if I'm wrong there). Also people have mentioned they're not interested in the high score lists. So I'm curious as why those doing so many cases are actually doing them. I should point out I'm not criticising them just curious. Is it for treasure hunting or because you can?

I took a look at a lot of the games on topwebgames. I wanted to see how they differed rule wise to Sleuth. For a start every game has a set of rules. It's true we have a code of conduct, but we don't have a list of game rules. And yes I think we need a set of rules, that way arguments about grey areas in the game are going to be minimised. Of course not everyone will be happy with the rules but at least people know where they stand.

Another thing about a large majority games is anything that provides automation/does part of it for you is banned. We are very lucky to be allowed it, most games wouldn't. I'm sure people would do it but they would also risk being banned if caught.

Password sharing is banned on most games and most games only allow one account per person. Yes this brings up the issue of multiple players in one household. The way this problem is usually rectified is just having someone contact the game's admin to inform them more than one person is playing. I'm not suggesting 1 account per person here, there's no reason why it can't be made 2, 3 or however many Ben says is appropriate.

I know I am now talking about other games but only because I want to make it clear how easy going this game is.

Ddog
Ddog
Old Shoe

Apr-18-2009 09:34

There seems to be some confusion as to what Irene's programme can and can't do. So I would like to clarify. It greatly speeds up the case solving process but it does not solve cases for you!

It can:
* Ask each suspect for it's motive and alibi automatically moving on to next suspect.
* Ask the Fortune Teller at the end to see if all suspects have been found
*Automatically check the PE of your contact against the suspects
*Visually logs all suspects, their alibi, PE evidence and all findings discovered
* Has a function to discover the 'theme' within a case (ie faction points etc)

It cannot:
* Check any non-contact evidence. This has to be done manually.
* Confirm alibis. Ditto.
* Find hiding suspects unless you have the right skill
* Ask for WE
* Accuse
* Continue if suspects clam up

So - all the logical manual requirements to case solving are still there.

I would also like to make a point which has already been touched upon. There is nothing anyone can do to stop any agent developing their own programme. No-one would ever know. So surely it's better for people to share these programmes with anyone who is interested otherwise it would be unfair.

Finally - this may come as a surprise - but I have nothing against removing high scores. Yes, it was a challenge at one point, but it would by no means spoil my enjoyment of the game if they didn't exist.


Adam Carter
Adam Carter
Big Winner

Apr-18-2009 10:19

I have to disagree with this completely. If the creator of the game says "Do not do X" then it's a rule. All the rules nicnic posted have been enforced in the past (and I can think of subscribed players that have been banned for more than one of them.) Currently, Ben is unable to be as active on the game as we would like, so he can't investigate those who are said to be breaking them. So they are under the "Honour System", but people should adhere to them, because they are rules.

Are automated helpers giving people an unfair advantage? Notepad, or even Dr. Watson have no issues, as you still have to do all the work yourself. Pidgeot's Helper is different, as it eliminates the need to do any writing. You still have to do the case yourself, as well as using skill and logic to work out when you need to stop asking for motives, who you should ask alibis for, and which questions you should ask of non-contact PE townies. If anything, it is an advanced note-taker.

I have seen the "Case Solver" in action, and it is a very different beast. People can argue about its ability to solve a case unaided, and I guess both would be correct. It *can* solve a case for you, if the conditions are correct. But, regardless, there are things that it *does* do, every time, without any interaction from the user. They are: visit suspects and obtain profiles, obtain enough motives to reveal all suspects, get alibis for all suspects, visit your contact and exhaust all questions, and provide you with a table, showing which remaining suspects can/cannot match the remaining PE. And it can do all this in under 2 minutes, by clicking just one button. That is certainly automated, and even botting - or at least "semi-botting" as it requires some user input. Even so, if this is coupled with the access to all possible contacts, a full caseload would be able to be completed in under an hour, and all without the use of any grey matter.

Adam Carter
Adam Carter
Big Winner

Apr-18-2009 10:20

Is there any skill left in the game? I feel that this game has become too easy. Not because the cases are too easy, but because there are facilities in place that remove the need for any skill or logic. It is possible, once you are in an agency with at least 4 people, to complete close to 100% AI cases using everybody's contacts. I'm sure this wasn't Ben's intention when he came up with the case files idea, but since no restrictions were put in place to stop it, people have taken advantage of it. Now, unless you do a Villain Hunt, there is no difficulty in completing cases. AI becomes simply Trivial.

Why do we share passwords? I have yet to play another game where there is an advantage to sharing passwords. Most games actually specifically disallow it and do ban players for doing it. Where else would we condone the use of password sharing? I wouldn't let anyone have the password to my email account, and certainly not for my online bank account, so why here?

Sleuth is a unique game. Since getting interest in voting for Sleuth on TWG (which you all should still be doing!) I played a number of the other games listed on there, to see what makes Sleuth stand out. None of the other games I played (about 20 so far) allow such a free interaction between players, or sharing of the device which gains experience (in this case, the cases).

I believe there should be a limit to the number of cases we can play a week. If you want to do 150+ cases a week, there is nothing to stop you getting a second detective to play. I don't see the advantages of playing so many cases on one detective, unless it is to climb the high scores list more quickly than intended. It doesn't help with Treasure Hunts, as it is better to have all favours spread out amongst detectives. Lets not forget also, that the reason we have split exp on cases was because one player abused the case files, solving 250-300 cases a week. If it wasn't wrong, he wouldn't have acted on it.

Adam Carter
Adam Carter
Big Winner

Apr-18-2009 10:20

There are some things that can be changed subtly in the game to reintroduce the challenge, that shouldn't produce much complaint:

Limit use of contacts: As we know, we can only use the crime lab once a day, so why can we use contacts so freely? I would prefer to see a system similar to the crime lab, where we could choose a case, and it would automatically match any contact PE to the suspects in that case.

Limit use of Case Files: Allow people to only open so many other detectives cases in the files a day. The only real reasons to use case files if the contact frame above was introduced would be to help unclam suspects or to solve the case.

Limit IP logins: Only allow a single IP address to log into 2 detectives a day, and allow a detective to sign in from only 2 IP addresses a day. This would cut down on abuse in Treasure Hunts, as well as limiting the number of subs a single person can control in an agency. If family units play in the same house, then a petition can be made to the admins to allow them to increase the number of logins for their specific detectives.

Disallow solving of other detective's cases: This one is a little more controversial, but there is logical reasoning behind it. If a client asks a detective to solve a murder, then they expect it to be solved by that detective. So why should someone else be solving the case?

AI favours: This would add flavour to Treasure Hunts, introducing a greater chance of having to quit a needed favour. Most people can complete 85-90% of cases in a VH, whereas its about 99% of favours.

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