yes you did, the rating attached to your answer results in that, not in a revision
Which is, again, the same as saying that by voting "Yes" on an issue that fails, I really voted No. Because you are equating the RESULT of the vote with what I individually voted for. That isn't how this works.
You did not do it alone, but your vote also was in favor of throwing it out again, even if you were not
No, my vote was not in favor of throwing it out. You ASSUME that it was, because you ASSUME you know how these things are working. But you do not know that.
no I am not, it is very obviously a line that does not exist.
Then why do you keep claiming that I voted for something I did not vote for, as proven because the thing I didn't vote for happened?
how can they possibly still use it if they are aware?
I am just that good
On a more serious note, I would like an actual explanation for why it is not broken, not just blind faith in their abilities
it doesn’t take a majority to lead to wrong results
can you prove that they accurately understand them? I’d say I gave good reasons for why there is a disconnect, to the point that you voted wrong given what you wanted to happen.
Without access to WoTC's internal data and the back-end workings of the survey results? No, I can't. But I don't NEED to prove that I understand them. You need to prove that, because you are making an extraordinary claim here. I am claiming that the company which has been using a proccess for 10 years, reported to us on that process, and has seemingly accurately navigated these surveys for a decade... understands those surveys.
Your claim is that because things you don't like have happened, and you feel the survey options aren't accurate enough, that the survey is fundamentally flawed. You are making the claim, so you need the evidence. Just like if you claimed that Cleopatra suffered from Autism, it isn't on me the person saying "there is no evidence of that, and there is good reasoning to assume that lack of evidence is proof you are incorrect" to then definitively prove whether or not she had autism.
Because, again, if they were aware of this flaw, it would be corrected because it would be devastating to their understanding of the game. And how could they possibly be unaware after a decade of using it to accurately navigate these waters?
If they considered this, they would be better off with different options instead of trying to correct for avoidable mistakes
And maybe they tested those different options and they created EVEN WORSE problems. After all, every piece of language is fundamentally flawed and unable to perfectly convey all intent and clarity. That's WHY text-based communication suffers so much compared to in-person communication. And even in-person communication creates "noise" that obfuscates understanding.
Demonstrating "someone might have misunderstood" is the equivalent of demonstrating energy exists. It doesn't actually PROVE anything about the situation.
so the exact same system that lead to subclasses rated in the 20s, despite the goal to get everything over 70?
Saying ‘we have always done it this way’ is not a good reason to keep doing it…
The same process that led to subclasses in the 80's as well. Just because something does not always lead to success does not mean you abandon it as fundamentally flawed.
Also, to my knowledge, nothing in One DnD has been rated in the 20's. The only things rated in the 20's were from Next, and that playtest had a few mitigating circumstances, like none of those things actually being playtested before print. I am around 90% certain none of us saw the Berserker with exhaustion before the PHB.