You've sort of got it. There's an argument that saying "lynched" would be ambiguous on alignment, and provoke questions. Using the word "mislynch" to emphasise that lynching him is a mistake (when, as far as his point went, as you note, it didn't matter whether he was town or scum in those old games) is a bit overly cautious, and in my view could be a scum indicator for him.In post 371, Ramcius wrote:What's wrong with saying that you're being mislynched for certain behavior? We aren't talking about ongoing game, where outcome isn't clear and saying "mislynch" instead of "lynch" is pretty hard slip, but about past games, where alignment is already knownIn post 370, Battle Mage wrote:It did pinged you?Ramcius wrote:Why Cena is scum?In post 367, PJ. wrote:Bm doing the lord's work. I'm in on all those lunches after we lynch cena
Also, BM isn't doing lord's work, didn't his argument about Dre complaining about being mislynched often instead of saying lynched pinged you? Cause it sure did pinged me
Looking forward to hearing this explanation! (from you Ramcius, not Panzerjager by the way)
It's really not the biggest thing to latch onto, so I'm still not clear why that did ping you, out of everything else here?
It's not a slip, I was suggesting the opposite - it's someone using language carefully, not natural perhaps. It's far from a robust argument, but it rings more scummy than town to me in this case.In post 372, gobbledygook wrote:BM, why is the word mislynch a potential slip for Drew? A lynch on scum isn’t a mislynch. A lynch on town is a mislynch though