VulcanM wrote: » DrZola wrote: » Cue up the predictable shutdown post: “I’m sorry you were unhappy with the champs you got. Everyone has the same drop rates unless otherwise specified. Etc. etc.” Dr. Zola its predictable because its the truth, and some people are just to self centered to see otherwise
DrZola wrote: » Cue up the predictable shutdown post: “I’m sorry you were unhappy with the champs you got. Everyone has the same drop rates unless otherwise specified. Etc. etc.” Dr. Zola
V1PER1987 wrote: » G0311 wrote: » was wanting Aegon as my number 1, symbiote supreme, and Starky not bad consolation prizes Where are Sym Supreme and Sparky? Don’t see either.
G0311 wrote: » was wanting Aegon as my number 1, symbiote supreme, and Starky not bad consolation prizes
SparkAlot wrote: » Johnyzero wrote: » Hard to believe all champs have same drop rate. Had 50% of champs I’d be happy to pull and pulled 0 out of 7. There has to be a weight on each champ you can get... they don't disclose this, all they say it will be 100% 5*.
Johnyzero wrote: » Hard to believe all champs have same drop rate. Had 50% of champs I’d be happy to pull and pulled 0 out of 7.
Thatweirdguy wrote: » SparkAlot wrote: » Johnyzero wrote: » Hard to believe all champs have same drop rate. Had 50% of champs I’d be happy to pull and pulled 0 out of 7. There has to be a weight on each champ you can get... they don't disclose this, all they say it will be 100% 5*. The only thing Apple requires them to disclose is drop rate of what you get in general. Here, it is 100% a 5* champ. The odds of which of those champs you get is not required by Apple sadly so they will not disclose it. An awful lot of She Hulks and KGs getting pulled today
Omni wrote: » Quit pandering to the base of unlucky souls noob. You’re easily one of the luckiest in the game with feature pulls and you know it. That’s probably your first bad batch while I’m like 4/35
Scholia wrote: » I opened 2 featured. There no rng. It’s just weighted IMO. Sigh...
Demonzfyre wrote: » DrZola wrote: » Cue up the predictable shutdown post: “I’m sorry you were unhappy with the champs you got. Everyone has the same drop rates unless otherwise specified. Etc. etc.” Dr. Zola Because its true?
V1PER1987 wrote: » VulcanM wrote: » DrZola wrote: » Cue up the predictable shutdown post: “I’m sorry you were unhappy with the champs you got. Everyone has the same drop rates unless otherwise specified. Etc. etc.” Dr. Zola its predictable because its the truth, and some people are just to self centered to see otherwise It’s called healthy skepticism, not being self centered, and I wouldn’t trust anyone who didn’t have it when it comes to things of this nature. No need for a tin foil hat but trusting 100% makes you a sheeple.
,providing people with more and better information is unlikely to improve matters. Scientists hope to dispel antiscience prejudices by better science education, and pundits hope to sway public opinion on issues like Obamacare or global warming by presenting the public with accurate facts and expert reports. Such hopes are grounded in a misunderstanding of how humans actually think. Most of our views are shaped by communal groupthink rather than individual rationality, and we cling to these views because of group loyalty. Bombarding people with facts and exposing their individual ignorance is likely to backfire. Most people don’t like too many facts, and they certainly don’t like to feel stupid. If you think that you can convince Donald Trump of the truth of global warming by presenting him with the relevant facts — think again.Indeed, scientists who believe that facts can change public opinion may themselves be the victims of scientific groupthink. The scientific community believes in the efficacy of facts, hence those loyal to that community continue to believe they can win public debates by marshaling the right facts, despite much empirical evidence to the contrary. Similarly, the traditional belief in individual rationality may itself be the product of groupthink rather than of empirical evidence. In one of the climactic moments of Monty Python’s “Life of Brian,” a huge crowd of starry-eyed followers mistakes Brian for the Messiah. Caught in a corner, Brian tells his disciples: “You don’t need to follow me, you don’t need to follow anybody! You’ve got to think for yourselves! You’re all individuals!” The enthusiastic crowd then chants in unison: “Yes! We’re all individuals!” Monty Python was parodying the counterculture orthodoxy of the 1960s, but the point may be true of the belief in rational individualism in other ages too.
CoatHang3r wrote: » That said the debate becomes one of ideology... but I found this little excerpt from a book titled “The Knowledge Illusion” that might shed some insight onto what is happening in these debates and is applicable to both sides. Take from it what you will, I for one am thanking my early exposure to Monty Python for educating me on groupthink early in life.
RiderofHell wrote: » Honestly i had enough for 2 but decided 1 try is enough of a disappointment lol
Gmonkey wrote: » This is why I open basic and 1 of 10 are good in basic. Have more chances. For me I need science and skill champs best I have is 5 star r4 modok and 5 star r4 korg. Great for defense but have none for offense. This is who I pulled from basic yesterday, this is after 4 trash featured pulls. No one in the current crystal is a game changer for me have stark 5/65 except aegon for lol.
CoatHang3r wrote: » V1PER1987 wrote: » VulcanM wrote: » DrZola wrote: » Cue up the predictable shutdown post: “I’m sorry you were unhappy with the champs you got. Everyone has the same drop rates unless otherwise specified. Etc. etc.” Dr. Zola its predictable because its the truth, and some people are just to self centered to see otherwise It’s called healthy skepticism, not being self centered, and I wouldn’t trust anyone who didn’t have it when it comes to things of this nature. No need for a tin foil hat but trusting 100% makes you a sheeple. I would argue sheeple are the one’s who rely solely on groupthink as evidence, especially when that groupthink is demonstrably unreliable or false (Not to say that groupthink is inherently wrong but it can often be unreliable and false.) That said the debate becomes one of ideology... but I found this little excerpt from a book titled “The Knowledge Illusion” that might shed some insight onto what is happening in these debates and is applicable to both sides. Take from it what you will, I for one am thanking my early exposure to Monty Python for educating me on groupthink early in life. ,providing people with more and better information is unlikely to improve matters. Scientists hope to dispel antiscience prejudices by better science education, and pundits hope to sway public opinion on issues like Obamacare or global warming by presenting the public with accurate facts and expert reports. Such hopes are grounded in a misunderstanding of how humans actually think. Most of our views are shaped by communal groupthink rather than individual rationality, and we cling to these views because of group loyalty. Bombarding people with facts and exposing their individual ignorance is likely to backfire. Most people don’t like too many facts, and they certainly don’t like to feel stupid. If you think that you can convince Donald **** of the truth of global warming by presenting him with the relevant facts — think again.Indeed, scientists who believe that facts can change public opinion may themselves be the victims of scientific groupthink. The scientific community believes in the efficacy of facts, hence those loyal to that community continue to believe they can win public debates by marshaling the right facts, despite much empirical evidence to the contrary. Similarly, the traditional belief in individual rationality may itself be the product of groupthink rather than of empirical evidence. In one of the climactic moments of Monty Python’s “Life of Brian,” a huge crowd of starry-eyed followers mistakes Brian for the Messiah. Caught in a corner, Brian tells his disciples: “You don’t need to follow me, you don’t need to follow anybody! You’ve got to think for yourselves! You’re all individuals!” The enthusiastic crowd then chants in unison: “Yes! We’re all individuals!” Monty Python was parodying the counterculture orthodoxy of the 1960s, but the point may be true of the belief in rational individualism in other ages too.
,providing people with more and better information is unlikely to improve matters. Scientists hope to dispel antiscience prejudices by better science education, and pundits hope to sway public opinion on issues like Obamacare or global warming by presenting the public with accurate facts and expert reports. Such hopes are grounded in a misunderstanding of how humans actually think. Most of our views are shaped by communal groupthink rather than individual rationality, and we cling to these views because of group loyalty. Bombarding people with facts and exposing their individual ignorance is likely to backfire. Most people don’t like too many facts, and they certainly don’t like to feel stupid. If you think that you can convince Donald **** of the truth of global warming by presenting him with the relevant facts — think again.Indeed, scientists who believe that facts can change public opinion may themselves be the victims of scientific groupthink. The scientific community believes in the efficacy of facts, hence those loyal to that community continue to believe they can win public debates by marshaling the right facts, despite much empirical evidence to the contrary. Similarly, the traditional belief in individual rationality may itself be the product of groupthink rather than of empirical evidence. In one of the climactic moments of Monty Python’s “Life of Brian,” a huge crowd of starry-eyed followers mistakes Brian for the Messiah. Caught in a corner, Brian tells his disciples: “You don’t need to follow me, you don’t need to follow anybody! You’ve got to think for yourselves! You’re all individuals!” The enthusiastic crowd then chants in unison: “Yes! We’re all individuals!” Monty Python was parodying the counterculture orthodoxy of the 1960s, but the point may be true of the belief in rational individualism in other ages too.
V1PER1987 wrote: » CoatHang3r wrote: » V1PER1987 wrote: » VulcanM wrote: » DrZola wrote: » Cue up the predictable shutdown post: “I’m sorry you were unhappy with the champs you got. Everyone has the same drop rates unless otherwise specified. Etc. etc.” Dr. Zola its predictable because its the truth, and some people are just to self centered to see otherwise It’s called healthy skepticism, not being self centered, and I wouldn’t trust anyone who didn’t have it when it comes to things of this nature. No need for a tin foil hat but trusting 100% makes you a sheeple. I would argue sheeple are the one’s who rely solely on groupthink as evidence, especially when that groupthink is demonstrably unreliable or false (Not to say that groupthink is inherently wrong but it can often be unreliable and false.) That said the debate becomes one of ideology... but I found this little excerpt from a book titled “The Knowledge Illusion” that might shed some insight onto what is happening in these debates and is applicable to both sides. Take from it what you will, I for one am thanking my early exposure to Monty Python for educating me on groupthink early in life. ,providing people with more and better information is unlikely to improve matters. Scientists hope to dispel antiscience prejudices by better science education, and pundits hope to sway public opinion on issues like Obamacare or global warming by presenting the public with accurate facts and expert reports. Such hopes are grounded in a misunderstanding of how humans actually think. Most of our views are shaped by communal groupthink rather than individual rationality, and we cling to these views because of group loyalty. Bombarding people with facts and exposing their individual ignorance is likely to backfire. Most people don’t like too many facts, and they certainly don’t like to feel stupid. If you think that you can convince Donald **** of the truth of global warming by presenting him with the relevant facts — think again.Indeed, scientists who believe that facts can change public opinion may themselves be the victims of scientific groupthink. The scientific community believes in the efficacy of facts, hence those loyal to that community continue to believe they can win public debates by marshaling the right facts, despite much empirical evidence to the contrary. Similarly, the traditional belief in individual rationality may itself be the product of groupthink rather than of empirical evidence. In one of the climactic moments of Monty Python’s “Life of Brian,” a huge crowd of starry-eyed followers mistakes Brian for the Messiah. Caught in a corner, Brian tells his disciples: “You don’t need to follow me, you don’t need to follow anybody! You’ve got to think for yourselves! You’re all individuals!” The enthusiastic crowd then chants in unison: “Yes! We’re all individuals!” Monty Python was parodying the counterculture orthodoxy of the 1960s, but the point may be true of the belief in rational individualism in other ages too. What you’re saying makes sense. I think there is a lot of groupthink on these forums. Seems basically like bandwagon mentality. But I think a healthy skepticism on both sides is important. As DNA mentioned most people do not want to hear facts or evidence to prove them wrong. I would like to think my skepticism is my starting point until I discover evidence to solidify my position. Yeah, of course I’ll admit I’m slightly skeptical of RNG in this game. There’s so much of it everywhere it’s hard not to form your own opinion on it whether positive or negative. The problem is there is really no true evidence Kabam could really publish that would really confirm or deny whether RNG is equally weighted or not unless some programmer analyzed their system and was able to say with 100% conviction that everything is equal. Even then, like DNA said most people wouldn’t believe it. You basically have to take the mods word on it and who knows if they even know. On the other side, you can’t prove RNG is not weighted equally too. There’s certainly plenty of people with great luck in the game and it seems they are blessed beyond belief with every pull. That’s where it evens out. Some people are just lucky and others aren’t. It would be really interesting to gather the data from the game from all the 5* ever pulled and see where the data points lie. Also, when you’re unlucky and constantly get kicked when you’re down by RNG, that basically becomes your evidence. If only 5% of your pulls are good and others pulls are 50/50, it’s hard to not incorporate that into your thinking. I think a lot of people here have personal experiences with RNG and just band with others with likewise the experiences. I don’t know if I would necesarily call it groupthinking. I would more or less call it complaining about crappy pulls. Then again I don’t really know. What constitutes groupthink?
ContestOfNoobs wrote: » Omni wrote: » Quit pandering to the base of unlucky souls noob. You’re easily one of the luckiest in the game with feature pulls and you know it. That’s probably your first bad batch while I’m like 4/35 The vid and post is from a friend, told me to wait until they opened and made this video. I havent opened any, did go 0/4 ghost and got her from basics, ima stick to basics lol Also someone else just shared this.
New_Noob168 wrote: » ContestOfNoobs wrote: » Omni wrote: » Quit pandering to the base of unlucky souls noob. You’re easily one of the luckiest in the game with feature pulls and you know it. That’s probably your first bad batch while I’m like 4/35 The vid and post is from a friend, told me to wait until they opened and made this video. I havent opened any, did go 0/4 ghost and got her from basics, ima stick to basics lol Also someone else just shared this. can someone explain the RNG on this and what are the chances for this? Better chances getting hit by a lightning...True RNG huh? lol