The Great Teeter-Totter
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@codywolfgang_xbl said in The Great Teeter-Totter:
@johnny_reb34_psn said in The Great Teeter-Totter:
@codywolfgang_xbl said in The Great Teeter-Totter:
@johnny_reb34_psn said in The Great Teeter-Totter:
@worldrevolver said in The Great Teeter-Totter:
What I believe happens with pci and other hitting types is there are folders that contain results. There is a perfect perfect folder and in it there are 27 entries for lineouts, 27 for flyouts, 27 for groundouts, 27 for basehit, 27 for gappers, 27 for homers, etc.
This allows SDS to adjust hitting percentages based on eliminating or adding results to the folder.
For example, if they made a mistake and deleted all the good results from the high center of pci folder and only had lineouts in the folder no matter what you did, if you hit the ball high center of the pci it would be a lineout.
So what you are doing is locating the pci so the game can then look up the result from the folder and generate the outcome.
This is why you can do the exact same thing with the pci placement on a pitch (go to practice to test this) and get vastly different results.
You, whether you're being facetious or not (hope you're another that sees through the charade), are kinda correct. It's coded outcomes. Perhaps 27 to the 9th power as you indicate. Someone actually posted code "supposedly" from this game a couple years back.
It was impressive. But the conditions (pitcher rating/batter rating/situation/etc.) were predicated with player record. In other words weight (I can't tell you how much) is surely placed on the player's record. How much, again, I couldn't tell you from the code but it was definitely part of the equation. Which it really shouldn't be. But, that's what keeps anyone from being too good or too bad.
I'll find that little snippet of code and post it. Let it breathe a little. Let you all decide whether it's legit or not.
Whenever I start a game I can tell if my opponent is good or not in the first inning. I don’t know how you actually believe what you are implying.
If the guy I’m playing doesn’t swing at junk and puts a well timed swing on pitches in the zone with decent pci placement I know I’m in for a battle. Same with pitching some morons throw two off speed pitches in the dirt followed by an up and in sinker. There are other guys that know how to change speeds within the strike zone and use the angles of the pitch to create deception.
To say there is no skill involved in the game is idiotic.
Look Wolfgang..you don't know anything about an opponent being bad or good in the first inning. All you know is what the AI animation is showing you. The code can take every pitch and change it's trajectory in an impossible fashion so the very best player out here is just swinging at air. By the same token any chump can square up on balls out of the zone if the AI decides to animate it so.
So, you really don't know. But, keep telling yourself that. Also, when that "terrible" player gets one pitch late in the game the AI actually lets them see correctly and they plant it into the cheap seats for the winning run in a 1-0 game...tell yourself you just got beat by an amateur that really sucked. Don't forget.
My last couple BR runs I have hit above nine wins and am sitting at 11-0 now waiting for the new player tomorrow. How can you explain being able to accomplish that if the game is rigged. I haven’t spent a dollar on the game....why would they let me win all the time?
BR is right there with moments as the biggest trainwreck no-skill waste-of-time in this game. I haven't played it since 2018 because of it's complete slot-machine outcome. Rest assured...you can drop 9 in a row just as easy..and not understand how that's possible after you won 9 straight.
I'm not at all questioning your ability. You may have superior skills. You may have a top-secret approach to this game no one before you has ever even thought of. You may have intuition and pitch-recognition that is unworldly. And, if it were real life and you were competing against real-life physics, outcomes, and such you might accomplish great things and be famous.
But, in the 'ol MLB the Ho-Ho world none of that stuff really matters.
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@johnny_reb34_psn said in The Great Teeter-Totter:
@codywolfgang_xbl said in The Great Teeter-Totter:
@johnny_reb34_psn said in The Great Teeter-Totter:
@codywolfgang_xbl said in The Great Teeter-Totter:
@johnny_reb34_psn said in The Great Teeter-Totter:
@worldrevolver said in The Great Teeter-Totter:
What I believe happens with pci and other hitting types is there are folders that contain results. There is a perfect perfect folder and in it there are 27 entries for lineouts, 27 for flyouts, 27 for groundouts, 27 for basehit, 27 for gappers, 27 for homers, etc.
This allows SDS to adjust hitting percentages based on eliminating or adding results to the folder.
For example, if they made a mistake and deleted all the good results from the high center of pci folder and only had lineouts in the folder no matter what you did, if you hit the ball high center of the pci it would be a lineout.
So what you are doing is locating the pci so the game can then look up the result from the folder and generate the outcome.
This is why you can do the exact same thing with the pci placement on a pitch (go to practice to test this) and get vastly different results.
You, whether you're being facetious or not (hope you're another that sees through the charade), are kinda correct. It's coded outcomes. Perhaps 27 to the 9th power as you indicate. Someone actually posted code "supposedly" from this game a couple years back.
It was impressive. But the conditions (pitcher rating/batter rating/situation/etc.) were predicated with player record. In other words weight (I can't tell you how much) is surely placed on the player's record. How much, again, I couldn't tell you from the code but it was definitely part of the equation. Which it really shouldn't be. But, that's what keeps anyone from being too good or too bad.
I'll find that little snippet of code and post it. Let it breathe a little. Let you all decide whether it's legit or not.
Whenever I start a game I can tell if my opponent is good or not in the first inning. I don’t know how you actually believe what you are implying.
If the guy I’m playing doesn’t swing at junk and puts a well timed swing on pitches in the zone with decent pci placement I know I’m in for a battle. Same with pitching some morons throw two off speed pitches in the dirt followed by an up and in sinker. There are other guys that know how to change speeds within the strike zone and use the angles of the pitch to create deception.
To say there is no skill involved in the game is idiotic.
Look Wolfgang..you don't know anything about an opponent being bad or good in the first inning. All you know is what the AI animation is showing you. The code can take every pitch and change it's trajectory in an impossible fashion so the very best player out here is just swinging at air. By the same token any chump can square up on balls out of the zone if the AI decides to animate it so.
So, you really don't know. But, keep telling yourself that. Also, when that "terrible" player gets one pitch late in the game the AI actually lets them see correctly and they plant it into the cheap seats for the winning run in a 1-0 game...tell yourself you just got beat by an amateur that really sucked. Don't forget.
My last couple BR runs I have hit above nine wins and am sitting at 11-0 now waiting for the new player tomorrow. How can you explain being able to accomplish that if the game is rigged. I haven’t spent a dollar on the game....why would they let me win all the time?
BR is right there with moments as the biggest trainwreck no-skill waste-of-time in this game. I haven't played it since 2018 because of it's complete slot-machine outcome. Rest assured...you can drop 9 in a row just as easy..and not understand how that's possible after you won 9 straight.
I'm not at all questioning your ability. You may have superior skills. You may have a top-secret approach to this game no one before you has ever even thought of. You may have intuition and pitch-recognition that is unworldly. And, if it were real life and you were competing against real-life physics, outcomes, and such you might accomplish great things and be famous.
But, in the 'ol MLB the Ho-Ho world none of that stuff really matters.
Haha what? I just told you I am sitting at 11-0 at the moment. There is zero chance that I could lose nine in a row.
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