Originally posted by Dominik Chłobowski:If the GPT has a turn out that doesn't allow to properly compensate a judge for the time it takes, why should the judge be the one who makes a sacrifice?
The judge is being paid an inadequate compensation for the time (no, I will never ask a store to pay a box for a 9-man GPT)
Edited Emilien Wild (July 20, 2016 06:28:03 PM)
Originally posted by Lars Harald Nordli:
I believe one can never get enough training at competitive, even though you are a L2. ;)
Edited Toby Hazes (July 20, 2016 08:36:31 PM)
Originally posted by Toby Hazes:
In the end, if you just really enjoy judging competitive tournaments and don't enjoy them on regular, that's perfectly fine. The vast majority of events is regular. I assume the mainstay judge is a regular judge. I would guess this change significantly increases the amount of judges willing to judge a GPT, as they don't have to learn that silly IPG anymore to do so.
I'd also like to add that as a player I'd prefer decklists for a limited GPT, because I perceive the potential for cheating as higher and continuous construction makes scouting an even bigger deal. Decklists and no continuous construction can be done at regular but I would also be fine with competitive limited GPTs and regular constructed GPTs as a player. Poll you locals about it. And as others have said, never assume =)
Originally posted by Lars Harald Nordli:
Thank you for your reply. I see on your profile that you are the Judge Manager for a lot of GPT's, but that the Head Judge for each event is another judge. Can I ask you how long since you actually judged a GPT? I'm being a bit sharp here and I apologize, but the answers I have got so far from most of you are of high-level judges that doesn't seem to work at the lower level events as judges. I then have to question how much insight you actually have in the subject you are speaking?
I have discussed with other local judges about Regular/Competetive GPT's, and it seems like we're going to try for å higher entry fee with a bigger prize pool (display to the winner) in order to run them at Competetive as that REL is what seems like the GPT-players want to practice on.
It seems that it works out ok for me (continue to run GPT's at Competetive) but I like the discussion we're having, although no one else seems to share my point of view… :rolleyes:
Edited Joaquín Pérez (July 20, 2016 09:49:04 PM)
Originally posted by Joaquín Pérez:
But honestly I don't think all of this matters, and I'd advise you against asking every judge who has a different point of view about “hey, how much time since you actually judged a GPT??”. As you might be aware, a lot of GPTs aren't created as events in JudgeApps (they're managed through local forums, in private or public projects), so quite a lot of judges haven't them listed in their profile. I manually submitted a few (yes, you can do that, and I absolutely encourage you to do so, particularly if you're a L1 trying to advance to L2 or get more experience in bigger events) to show some experience on the field, when I was “younger”, heh :)
The main argument about “Regular REL GPTs are boring” is difficult for me to understand, sorry.
Originally posted by Lars Harald Nordli:You should indeed not.
I was under the impression that all Competitive events should be listed here on JudgeApps. If that's not the case then I should probably not make quick assumptions henceforth.
Originally posted by Lars Harald Nordli:And that's totally fine. The judge program is diverse enough that every single judge doesn't have to enjoy every single activity, nor engage in activities he or she doesn't like instead of the one he or she enjoys.
Regular GPT's where you have to be in the venue for 8-10 hours and are prohibited to do something other than observe and running the tournament seems boring to me after the first 2-3 hours.
Originally posted by Christopher Wendelboe:You remember correctly; premium prizes must be awarded for the pemium event with which they're assoicated.
My question, which I seem to recall the answer being “no” to: if a GPT is run on Friday night, can you hand out FNM promos as part of the prize support? How about release promos on release weekend?
Originally posted by Dominik Chłobowski:
The judge “should” be the one to make the
sacrifice because the reasonable personable thing to do is to offer
yourself for 1.5 packs/player (at least until such a point where that stops
being satisfactory to you) to the small store you want to support.
Originally posted by Lars Harald Nordli:
Regular GPT's where you have to be in the venue for 8-10 hours and are prohibited to do something other than observe and running the tournament seems boring to me after the first 2-3 hours. If you believe that is super-fun, then we have to agree to disagree on this one as well! :D
Originally posted by Michael He:
1. I will be judging a regular REL GPT this weekend, but I don't expect it to differ from the previous GPTs I've judged, but I will get back to you Sunday.
2. What kind of signal will it send if the only judge at the event is treating it like FNM or game day and is busy doing other things while they are playing?
3. Lastly, there's always the possibility of running GPTs at competitive REL if your community wants.
Regular REL (Rules Enforcement Level) encourages a welcoming atmosphere and friendly competition. As judges, we should be friendly and involved, sometimes playing in events ourselves. Like players, we are encouraged to help at appropriate times, such as during deck construction or between matches. Judges are the last word when a dispute or question arises, and we should be as impartial and diplomatic as possible.
Originally posted by Emilien Wild:
The judge program is diverse enough that every single judge doesn't have to enjoy every single activity, nor engage in activities he or she doesn't like instead of the one he or she enjoys.