ColonelHardisson
What? Me Worry?
I thought that if you didn't want to vote for any items in a category, you could simply not check a selection and hit submit. That would be effectively an OPT OUT selection.
Orcus said:To me, the tightest race should have been Setting. Both Rokugan and Scarred Lands should have really given OA a big run for its money.
So if the results were tight, that would reaffirm my belief that this is not a popularity contest
EricNoah said:We only had maybe 7 or 8 products total to consider for Best Setting. The judges felt that OA was in the top 5.
It was the voting public that voted it to first place. OA did not win by a large percentage, btw.
Psion said:
...there's the rub. It was a popularity contest, at least the fan vote was. And we knew that. WotC won by name recognition. (Of course I am repeating myself).
Originally posted by Lady Dragon
Perhaps the solution is to limit all publishers to entering only their 3 best products.
tmaaas said:It seems that one of the biggest issues is how to reduce the effect circulation size/name recognition has on the awards. The problem is that a lesser product with a large distribution will probably beat a superior product with a small distribution in a popularity contest.
Would it be possible in the voting to also mark how many of the products in each category you have actually reviewed/read/used/etc. and feel qualified to judge between [1 to 5], and then weight the results accordingly? (Having a 0 option would also satisfy the 'opt out' requests that others have made; your vote could be ignored. But an explicit 'opt out' option would probably be better.)
Personally, if I've only read two of five products in a category and vote for one of those two, I would not consider my vote as significant as someone who was knowledgeable about all five products. Of course, marking how many products in each category you feel you are qualified to judge would depend on the honor system, but I trust the integrity of most voters.
Psion said:
FWIW, I fought against its inclusion. It's a good book, no doubt. Just didn't deserve to rub elbows in the setting department as it is more of a rulebook IMHO.