Deathsword:I'm going to call out this in particular:
Tiruin accused him of buddying.
You are objectively wrong. The original statement by NQT, NQT's reply to that post, and Tiruin's reply to it make it absolutely clear what they were talking about.
You are being obstinate about this for no good reason.
And even if he didn't accuse NQT of buddying, as you claim, I still did. Why? Because he was trying to buddy up to me. Why is it scummy? Because if you, as scum, can get a player to trust you, they are less likely to vote you and more likely to go after someone else.
I just don't see it. It was blatant. It was clearly a box of WIFOM. Without a better knowledge of NQT, there's no way to know how or why he chose your name. Speculating is completely pointless. It's a complete waste of time.
And he called you his
scumbuddy. That is the
strangest way to buddy someone that I've ever seen. In fact, that's probably the reason why you're reacting to it so badly.
Which leads me to the question, why are you going to such an effort to protect him?
Shouldn't I try to protect any townie from scum?
But in all seriousness, NQT's writing style is very similar to mine. I can clearly tell that he's not panicked in the least. That's also why I know your argument is bullshit, even if you don't.
Protecting NQT is only a side-effect of going after you. I'm not sorry about it, because you weren't getting anywhere. That you think you were with a claim like that is kind of bizarre.
The question is whether or not you're actually this paranoid, or if you're just out to get him because you smell an easy kill.
...but there's something else, too...
After you made your case, Nerjin popped in to support you with this gem:
NQT I have a question for you. Why so interested in scum advice?
So NQT's been voted by scum, and you've been linked to scum by a common target. Sure, it's possible Nerjin was buddying you
and voting for an ally. But those things just aren't that common.
That link alone might be a good enough reason for you to hang. But I want to hear what others think about it, first.