My Platform as an 2012 ENnie Judge Nominee

Ninjacowboy

First Post
Hello, my name is Frank Anderson, and I am a 2012 ENie Award Judge nominee. I am a long time gamer, who also writes a gaming blog called Have Dice, Will Travel. I would like to discuss what my platform, or rather, what my criteria would be when judging submissions to the ENnies. Please note that I may revise these criteria as time passes, and my ideas change. I believe this is an organic process, and nothing is written in stone. If I waited until I finalized my thoughts to write anything it would never happen.


First of all I would like to state that as a ENnie Judge I will remain objective, undistorted by emotion or personal bias. In other words, while I may not enjoy certain genres, or subject matters, I will give them the same level of regard I do other genres, or subject matters. I will be fair and impartial.

There are two important things I consider when analyzing a role-playing game, module, sourcebook, etc. First of all, is it playable? Secondly, is it entertaining/enjoyable? I think these two criteria should apply to both the person running the game, and the players. Now, I should make a distinction here; I think a game can be playable, but might not be enjoyable, but a game that's not playable is rarely, if ever, enjoyable.

The third thing I would consider is, does the product have a broad-based appeal to gamers? There might be a few gamers out there that would enjoy a RPG written about giant mutant babies that terrorize Earth, but I'm not sure it would have much of an audience, commercial or otherwise. After all, these are fan-based awards. After the nominees are selected, you, the gamer get to vote, and you're not likely to vote for something you've never heard of, much less bought or played.

Some of the other criteria I would consider are originality/creativity, ease of use, i.e. how well the submission is organized, and professionalism/craftsmanship, i.e. does the layout look good, is the font readable, etc?

In this day and age it is very easy to produce and publish a RPG and related material, whether it's a campaign sourcebook, map tiles, or any form of role-playing game accessory. POD ( publish on demand or even print on demand ) is in it's infancy, ( in my opinion ), and the technology is only going to improve over time. With the free open source programs available, a game can be made available in PDF or in an e-book format, making production and distribution easier than it has ever been. However, when you're trying publish a game I would hope people would try to meet some of the above criteria.

When it comes to blogs and pod casts, there are two things that I think are important. Is the blog or pod cast entertaining as well as informative? A blog should be well written. A pod cast should have good production values. Personality is important as well, if you come across as arrogant or snarky in your blog or padcast, then it really doesn't appeal to me. It doesn't matter how informative your blog might be, presentation, mood, whatever you want to call it, is important. Then again, I realize that those things might not bother some people, and I would have to consider that.

In my application, I mentioned play testing as much of the material as possible, and today I realized this was a misstatement. The material should have already been play tested as much as possible. An ENnie is an award for published material, whether it's a RPG with a large print run, or a free RPG available over the Internet. I think the only real way to fairly judge a submission would be to use it in play. Run a game, use the module, or accessory, and get other people's feedback. That's what I intend to do if I get elected.

If elected, I know this won't be an easy task. It will require time, and organization. I will be fair and impartial, and will show no favoritism to any particular company or product. I plan on giving each submission the same level of "inspection" and regard. Please feel free to ask me any questions, about games, etc. and how I would judge them , because while I know why the sky is blue, that's not what I am here for. I am also open to any suggestions you may have. Thank you for your time.

FYI, at one point I was going to write an RPG about giant mutant babies that terrorize Earth, but I thought it over, and decided the public wasn't ready yet. One day maybe...
 
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diaglo

Adventurer
First of all I would like to state that as a ENnie Judge I will remain objective, undistorted by emotion or personal bias. In other words, while I may not enjoy certain genres, or subject matters, I will give them the same level of regard I do other genres, or subject matters. I will be fair and impartial.


good luck Frank,

i like that you are going to be thorough and review all the material you are given to judge. i like that you are willing to be open.

but if you want my vote you are going to have to provide your bias and emotion. that is how i play and roll.

i want to know you think like me or will judge like me. it is why i would vote for you to represent me and my views and preferences.
 

Ninjacowboy

First Post
good luck Frank,

i like that you are going to be thorough and review all the material you are given to judge. i like that you are willing to be open.

but if you want my vote you are going to have to provide your bias and emotion. that is how i play and roll.

i want to know you think like me or will judge like me. it is why i would vote for you to represent me and my views and preferences.

I feel that as an ENnie judge I should be unbiased. For example, even if I prefer science fiction roleplaying games over fantasy roleplaying games, I shouldn't let it influence me. In fact I won't let it influence me. I should be fair and impartial. I will be fair and impartial. Otherwise why would any publisher or creator want to submit anything to the ENnies? If there are no submissions then there wouldn't be any awards, or the few that were submitted would make the awards meaningless.

The judging process has to be fair. No emotion, no personal bias, no cronyism, every submission should be judged on it's own merits, and nothing else. If that costs me votes then so be it. I wouldn't want to be a judge any other way.
 

diaglo

Adventurer
I feel that as an ENnie judge I should be unbiased. For example, even if I prefer science fiction roleplaying games over fantasy roleplaying games, I shouldn't let it influence me. In fact I won't let it influence me. I should be fair and impartial. I will be fair and impartial. Otherwise why would any publisher or creator want to submit anything to the ENnies? If there are no submissions then there wouldn't be any awards, or the few that were submitted would make the awards meaningless.

The judging process has to be fair. No emotion, no personal bias, no cronyism, every submission should be judged on it's own merits, and nothing else. If that costs me votes then so be it. I wouldn't want to be a judge any other way.

i can't vote for someone who has no emotions. good luck, Frank.
 

Ninjacowboy

First Post
i can't vote for someone who has no emotions. good luck, Frank.

I didn't say I didn't have any emotion. Why would you say that? I'm saying that the judging process should be unemotional. Showing no preference for any one genre. A judge has to be FAIR, IMPARTIAL, and UNBIASED.
 

A

amerigoV

Guest
I didn't say I didn't have any emotion. Why would you say that? I'm saying that the judging process should be unemotional. Showing no preference for any one genre. A judge has to be FAIR, IMPARTIAL, and UNBIASED.

My vote can be bought. What are you offering as compensation?
 

jbazin

First Post
I didn't say I didn't have any emotion. Why would you say that? I'm saying that the judging process should be unemotional. Showing no preference for any one genre. A judge has to be FAIR, IMPARTIAL, and UNBIASED.

To say that you are unbiased is a fallacy. Everyone has some bias towards something. Recognizing that bias is what's important in a judge.

Being fair and putting the same rigor into each item is one of the easiest ways to combat bias. If you evaluate each item with the same criteria, you'll get an output - then, recognizing your bias, you can adjust the output, if necessary.

For example, I typically don't like your standard fantasy fare. I know this - it's a negative bias I have. I also like modern-ish settings with weird thrown in. I know this - it's a positive bias I have. Now, when I compare two products, one is fantasy, one is modern with a weird twist, I can look at my criteria scores and compare them to each other, and other products that I don't have the same biases towards. Do the results make sense? Is the fantasy product rated way lower than the others? Can I quantify why that is (ie, spelling errors, broken mechanics, stick art), or is it just rated lower because of bias? If I can't back it up, then its bias. Same goes the other way.
 

Ninjacowboy

First Post
To say that you are unbiased is a fallacy. Everyone has some bias towards something. Recognizing that bias is what's important in a judge.

Being fair and putting the same rigor into each item is one of the easiest ways to combat bias. If you evaluate each item with the same criteria, you'll get an output - then, recognizing your bias, you can adjust the output, if necessary.

I wish people would stop saying that I wrote something that I didn't. I NEVER SAID I WAS UNBIASED. What I said that as a judge I would be unbiased. Do not assume that I can not be unbiased when it comes to the judging process, that is unfair. You do not know me. I repeat YOU DO NOT KNOW ME. Do not make assumptions. It's kind of funny that other judge nominees are the ones saying these things....
 

malach_re

First Post
Yeah I can agree with that. Everyone has thoughts, emotions and personal bias but those things are easily toned down by people who are actively trying. I'm not saying that I would be biased but I, like Frank, can take a step back from my own personal feelings and look at something from an objective standpoint. Sure we all bring our own baggage to the judging table with us but it's not something that we feel is going to impede our reviews. All games get placed on the table as equals and then the dice drop. From that moment on it's up to the game to impress us.
 

jbazin

First Post
I wish people would stop saying that I wrote something that I didn't. I NEVER SAID I WAS UNBIASED. What I said that as a judge I would be unbiased. Do not assume that I can not be unbiased when it comes to the judging process, that is unfair. You do not know me. I repeat YOU DO NOT KNOW ME. Do not make assumptions. It's kind of funny that other judge nominees are the ones saying these things....

Sorry, perhaps my wording was misleading, and my point unclear - I used the word you in response to the quote that I was responding to. It goes for every person - not just you. It's me, and every other candidate.

People claim that they are not biased, and are, or they say they are biased but that does not affect decision making. Organizational behaviour and human resources studies have shown that time and time again, biases play a part in nearly all decisions.

My point was that it is important to beg able to recognize what your biases are, and put steps in the process to correct for known biases.

So, as a fellow candidate, I'm saying that I have biases, I recognize some of them and I have a plan in place to correct for these known biases, and I think that all of the other candidates should make similar plans.
 

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