SubVersion said:I'd just like to ask, since you realistically can't do anything to stop players avoiding Wobbuffet for their own personal reasons, what possible weight can be given to any statistics collected?
A perfectly normal weight. It doesn't matter why people are avoiding Wobbuffet. If he's not being used then he surely can't centralise anything. (Note: He is being used.) If he weren't being used and one day people smartened up and started using him and it became obvious that he's broken we could always ban him then. If Mewtwo were unbanned but no one used him then he would not be causing any centralisation because you could just build teams as though he did not exist, since no one uses him. How much people use a pokemon is definitely linked to its ability to cause centralisation. (Of course, in all likelihood, everybody would be using Mewtwo, but the example requires you to suppose that no one does for whatever reason -- perhaps some mythical "code of honour".)
You do mention a disturbing aspect of the psychological argument. If we accept it, then there is no way to test anything. For example, people in this topic have mentioned that WiFi tournament where Wobbuffet was tested. But if we follow the psychological argument line of reasoning, I could say players in that tournament refused to prepare for Wobbuffet, because they trusted people to follow the code of honour, and hence it appeared overpowered when it wasn't. Of course, that's absurd. The psychological argument is just a patently obvious attempt to avoid facing up to evidence, and the most baffling part is that the evidence on Wobbuffet is not even out yet!
I don't know whether it's centralising anything -- because the evidence isn't here yet! But it seems these people advocating the psychological argument want to get their counterarguments ready in advance... no matter what the result is, their personal convictions are unaffected, because their beliefs are safely insulated by psychological arguments. But this isn't inevitable. I don't think most players can seriously accept this psychological argument. It's just so ridiculous. Yet it seems to have a positive following in the last few replies.
It seems like this is just a rant but I have encountered the psychological argument far too many times over the last few days. It does not lead to useful discussion. It is just an attempt to avoid facing up to the evidence before the evidence has even been collected.
I will concede that we did not give any obvious advance warning, although it was discussed in the chat. However, I think your analysis is wrong. With advance warning, we would have got the psychological argument just X days earlier than we got it now, and frankly the psychological argument is a huge waste of time, so if we avoided X days of messing around with it, then I am satisfied.It all depends on the public's reception of him, which let's face it, would have been slightly less volatile if more warning had been given and more discussion allowed beforehand; "btw I'm unbanning wobbuffet okay" doesn't really warm people up to testing him.
The psychological argument really strikes at the heart of the whole point of playing a competitive game, so refuting it is not just about Wobbuffet. So as not to be misunderstood: if the proponents of this argument had said "We haven't got around to improving our teams yet" etc. that would be perfectly legitimate, but that's not their argument; their argument is entirely of a psychological character, not a practical one -- not that they haven't improved their teams but that they claim that they -- and other players whom they consider respectable -- won't in light of rules that don't exist.
Raikou said:As soon as there is an actual announcement to all shoddy players that Wobbuffet use is allowed for testing purposes, and moveset changes are taken into consideration at the end of the month as well as the shift in Pokemon used, then yes we can accept statistics. Problem is, the only announcement about Wobbuffet on the ladder is scrolled off the screen when you log in and there are a lot of players turned off by the cheapness of it.
Actually, since it was pointed out, it is both at the top and the bottom of the welcome message. There's no reason you'd have to scroll to see it.
As for moves, we will definitely be doing an analysis of those, and they might be interesting for other purposes. For example, knowing what set is most popular on a pokemon with many popular sets--information that you could integrate into your pokemon play.
Your last sentence is just a restatement of the psychological argument.















