This makes me want to mod newbie games!! How exciting.
In post 3, Isis wrote:Is the last thing meant for newbies playing their second game onsite together? Or clusters of players with off-site experience playing a game together?
Independent of setup control, quasi-invitational newbie setups would be a big change.
This is tickling my brain in a good way.
I think one of the reasons I dove into MS so heavily was because at the end of my first game, the "dude who replaced after we killed the IC and basically played IC" advertised an open game he was running which was currently in signups. when giving feedback as an SE/IC in games, back in the day I used to try and take the dive and tell players if I thought they felt like, comfortable or experienced enough that they'd probably get a kick out of non-newbie games.
Even so, I think there are certain personalities which tend to avoid newbie games and there are definitely some newer players who can benefit from more exposure to other newbies.
I'm sorta waxing poetic. I think advertising non-newbie games is a great idea. Also agree a quasi-invitational for players with e.g. <5 games onsite + a small handful of generally well-regarded experienced players could be amazing.
edit:
In post 18, notscience wrote:I mean yeah SEs can do the same. I try to when I do it, I just feel like you also get some SEs who don’t care about that newbie retention or teaching and it goes south.
At risk of sounding cynical, I don't think people who are disinterested in teaching/newbie retention are a good fit for the SE role.
I also definitely think the "teaching" connotation of the IC role is better spread across multiple SE slots (I remember the "IC died n1, what do we do" vibe from the old days and... my poor brain)
edit again:
In post 23, Ircher wrote:I'm pretty sure the rule says that newbie mods have to check in at least once per day. That doesn't necessarily mean they have to post every day, but in most cases, they will have to anyway.
This is a reasonable take - sometimes (e.g. slow-moving but intense ELo/whatever where nobody is voting) vote counts every 12-24 hours can get cluttery, but regularly checking the thread is an absolute must.