Eden Zweig
Nomad
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Jan-21-2012 15:33
Sean King is the root cause of many of my misconceptions about starting an agnecy.
12 * 7 = 84
How come someone solves more than 200 cases a week? (so you get to solve cases stored by other officers and if you're the one making the accusation -regardless of whose case it was initially- you're the one that solves the case, right?)
Any other explanation to top scores seen in the Weekly High Scores List?
(and a grammar question: seen in the ... list or on the ... list?)
I read all the sticky posts at the time when I first created my detective raci(had 4 more, gonna retire them some time) but I guess such questions don't have answers in sticky posts which are kind of a summarized version of the Sleuth Help. Thanks.
(2nd grammar question if which qualifies the sticky posts does it require a comma prior to it, in between the two words? is there an ambiguity in my sentence?)
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Eden Zweig
Nomad
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Jan-21-2012 18:34
Aww. Yeah. That was a stupid question, I realize. The conditions of false accusation and xp loss have an if and only if relation anyway.
I tend to forget the connection of the rules of the game, it seems.
I still need time for it to sink in, sorry :)
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Eden Zweig
Nomad
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Jan-23-2012 11:30
No, Ima I guess favor cases don't count.
Because the number of cases stated in the weekly high scores list doesn't change after you solve a favor case, I've checked that out before asking,
plus let's say you have solved about 240 cases this week, like Sean did (more than that, actually)
240/4=60, 60*3 = 180 and 180 non-favor cases is a score well above that which you're allowed to solve weekly (84)
Or let's put it this way, a detective can solve a maximum of 7*12*4/3= 112 cases/week.
said another way, you get to solve other people's cases and unlike favors, these count in the list.
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