I don't recall saying you were the only one being a smart ***. I said you were the one constantly and consistently using ad hominem. I don't recall seeing Bones do it, if he did it definitely wasn't nearly on your scale, so it's obviously got nothing to do with your side of the argument. For example, accusing Kadano of trying to push his agenda isn't a fair way to interpret his words or his point of view in general. It's just poor sportsmanship.
If you can't see that he's biased, even after confessing.... Lol.
Kadano
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Massive
I apologize for my occasional smartass remarks, which in all honesty I put for entertainment purposes, not to display hate or unnecessary rudeness. I am voicing my opinion extra here because I feel the players that value fairness more than the average player don't really have a voice on this issue.
Where would YOU GUYS draw the line? Removable gates that can be swapped based on matchup? An octagonal gate that rotated like an expensive watch, with every 4 clicks the octagon realigned for several configurations ranging from 8 sided, to 16 sided, to other configurations with 32 possible notch positions?
I feel the notch rule is a very slippery slope. A notch isn't just a notch. The size and shape will vary, which will cause them to vary in effectiveness. I truly believe a luigi main can carve notches slightly bigger than Kadano's ideally placed for perfect wavedashes and significantly improve his speed within days. This could be the difference between chaingrabbing fox and whiffing the first regrab attempt almost every time. Because on full DI, the maximum length wd is a must. So the gray area of improvement due to the notches can become more black and white at times to me. And the new chaingrabbing ability doesn't exactly seem earned, but it will certainly help him turn many, many more grabs on fox players into KO's than he could before the mod.
The first time I ever learned to maximum length wd 10 years ago, I thought to myself "man, this would be a lot easier with a notch right here. The way my thumb wants to move sideways more so than forward and back, combined with the angle of the gate and the lack of friction between the gate and the stick, make this a pretty difficult position to achieve immediately under times of high stress. It really wants to slide into the Cardinal direction. I need to learn how to keep better control of the stick."
I saw this aspect of melee as a unique challenge that I soon became eager to master. I see that some see this challenge as rather an outside nuisance that came out of nowhere. I was under the impression that we had been dealing with virtually nothing but the octagon for 14 years, and that people actually viewed being able to hold the stick against the slide-happy side of the gate (while your thumb naturally wants to go a certain direction) as a prominent skill in melee. People who have mastered this to a point where they can execute it consistently (without anything to help his accuracy), under high stress situations certainly have my respect.
If you were to put a cut mark into the octagon in the spot for perfect wavedashes, it would provide tactile feedback of the threshold, but it would not KEEP you in position easier like a notch would. And notches vary in size and shape. Food for thought.
In regard to the slippery slope regarding the legality of notches, and the modification of the notches themselves, since we have decided that manipulating how the stick moves via changing the gate is acceptable, I feel the next step is altering the stick itself.
It wouldn't be hard to make the shaft of the stick like a
Torx bit
And have corresponding small grooves in the gate, which would ensure that, as long as you were holding an outward direction, the stick would not move from its position in the gate.
Another example would be creating sharp points (like on those of a star) that perfectly correspond with sharp, small notches carved into the gate. With this tongue-and-groove type of fit, you would have to apply pressure within a relatively small range to have it leave the notch. And as far as inputting the angle, all you would have to do is ride the gate until it snaps into place. You could probably hold any direction in a 180ish degree range, depending on the angle of the notch, and not leave the spot. With the option to apply force in nearly half of the possible directions and never leave the perfect wd spot, how much skill is involved? Can you not say this wouldn't help?