Mod Note:This is an insane comment.
As noted, the comment you’re responding to is an old phrase; your response seems a tad pointed. Do better going forward.
Mod Note:This is an insane comment.
maybe you would get a more passionate response with better templates…As Crawford said in one of those videos, they also look to qualitative feedback: if the dissatisfied people were passionate in their qualitative feedback, and the satisfied people were like "yeah, I could live with this if I had to"...
unreliable data for things they would not have added in this form anyway, great… not all data is valuableBut now WotC has the most valuable thing theybcould ask for: data.
I mean, they don't owe anyone outside of WotC the data...that's proprietary.maybe you would get a more passionate response with better templates…
If this is not just a matter of a 70% threshold but now you mix in passion too, the playtest is entirely theatre and WotC can just do whatever and justify it by the results.
The only thing stopping them is that they want a product that sells (ie avoid a 4e scenario), but the whole process becomes just one black box with lots of random elements
Just because the data doesn't give the result one may wish, doesn't mean that it is bad data.unreliable data for things they would not have added in this form anyway, great… not all data is valuable
no they do not, I did not say they doI mean, they don't owe anyone outside of WotC the data...that's proprietary.
that was not the point I am making, to me it is an objectively bad way to gather data, regardless of the outcome. I have been consistently distinguishing between these two. Bad methodology can lead to outcomes I like, a good one can lead to outcomes I do not like, that changes nothing about the quality of the methodologyJust because the data doesn't give the result one may wish, doesn't mean that it is bad data.