I can understand that you cba to reply to my entire post, but just answer my one question about the guy who couldn't tie his shoes nor conduct a normal conversation, but who was a math genius and I'll be satisfied. Idiot or genius?
In a math auditorium, any other situation where math is needed: a genius.
Everywhere else: a retard.
As, even if math is your profession, I think most of your life (family, partnership, friends, hobbies) is NOT determined by your capabilities in math, he will be most of the time a retard, and thus I would call him a retard. Doesn't mean I don't respect his skills in that particular discipline, but all in all it won't make up for the entire rest, if he isn't even able to tie his shoes. And in this case I mean retard not as insult.
And if I don't define a particular word you can assume I stick to the common definition found in any dictionary.
But if you keep on insulting me for having a different opinion, I fear I will have to stop discussing with you.
I'm smarter hence my argument is better? Gods, this fallacy needs a name.
I never said that my arguments would be better because I am smarter. I said if you want to maximize the rounds you win and your K/D-ratio, you should stick to your team and not seperate. (Of course NOT shoulder to shoulder to teamkill each other). My only explanation to why anyone, who has the same goals, does not stick to his team but simply run away, was not having thought about it properly. And as you definitely don't need to be Nobel Prize winner to come to the conclusion that you are more effective with teammates supporting you, without even starting to actually think "really" about a problem to find a solution, the conclusion I had was rather... sad...
Edit: and by the way it was not meant "in total", applying for everyone, and it was certainly exaggerated to a certain degree.
Still dear Joker you never cared to respond to my earlier post? Too smart to even give it a look?
I actually wrote it somewhere here in the topic, I don't know any more if before or after your post.
Your basic statement was: "You can't expect from random players to act like trained soldier", wasn't it?
Well, my answer to this is that you can. It's not like there is a complete training to undergo, with handling your weapons, learning ranks and organisation, physical education and so on, you just have to watch and imitate. There are plenty of other games, where nowhere in the tutorial is said how you do something in particular, and yet almost every time when you play it, the same class drops ammunition/sentry guns/whatever at the same (most beneficial) spot of a map, which often isn't that obvious, and similar things. How does this work? Because people watch others doing it, if they don't get immediately why they do this they ask, usually get an answer, they get the whole point of the action and suddenly become a bit better at the game, understanding it far better. But if noone is doing it, noone else can learn from it. Just go and play "Global Agenda", and watch how every tank assault who is tanking the Dismantler in Dome Defense Raids will move to the same corner of the map. It's written nowhere, the corner does not have any obvious advantage, and yet it's the best you can do GIVEN THAT THE OTHERS ARE USING THE SAME BATTLE PLAN. And they are.
If someone says he's doing the Dome Defense Raid for the first time people show him how it's done, and then he sticks to this and after some time, when he gained some experience and confidence, he will adjust it a little bit to fit better to his personal build/preferences. But all in all everyone know what he has to do, and it goes a little bit further than "kill the enemy". If the Global Agenda community is capable of this, with probably the most horrible troll-city-chat of all times, the cRPG community should be able, too.
Link to the entire choreography of the raid. Most people participating in those raids never have seen it. As you see, people are capable of learning.