•Jembot - You're the doctor, and after seeing someone scumhunting in a very powerful and effective way, you protect them, and nobody dies in the night. Do you now support their decisions and try to back them up? How would you go about this without it seeming like buddying?
[1]I wouldn't believe their every word, but in most cases in which I don't know anything else about that specific person as compared to the person who they are trying to lynch, I would be inclined to believe them. If they tried to lynch someone I wouldn't just hump on the bandwagon immediately, I would make my mind up first, but all other things being equal I would be more likely to vote for who they are trying to lynch than some other lynchee. [2]If they someone tried to lynch them, I would then try to divert attention off them, and would not vote for them unless they did something extremely scummy. I wouldn't just jump to their defense immediately, but start questioning a few other players and see if I can get focus peoples suspicions on them and not on the (most likely) town.
[1] This is a very bad idea. Strong scumhunting doesn't mean they're not wrong. I've done strong scum-hunting that has led to town deaths. This sort of thing happens. Strong scumhunting is a town-tell but not much else on its own.
[2] Oh? What if the other player's case is strong? What exact questions would you try to ask to deflect the blame? Odds are that if someone is voting someone else there is a good game reason for it. How do you account for these contingincies?
I want to add some further advice here, both as a player and as an IC.
[1] Not merely a bad idea, a terrible one. Good players will use strong scum-hunting
as scum to throw Town off the rails. So, not only might they be wrong, they might be deliberately wrong,
and you may not even realize it.[2]
Never try deflection on another player. Deflection is almost never effective when you're attempting to divert attention from yourself, and it just looks scummy when you're using it to defend someone else. If you're not going to role-claim as part of that deflection, then you're setting yourself up to look very bad.
Right now, I have a complete null read on you. You're showing that you are a new mafia player, very much so right now. That's understandable, but you need to be putting more effort forward to identify scum.
I'm going to tell you, frankly, that this lack of scum-hunting tends to make you look scummy. New players often fall into that trap in their first few games, especially if they draw scum in role assignment. The thinking goes, "I'm scum, so I'm safe so long as I stay below the radar."
Wrong.
You're safe so long as you're actively scum-hunting. You can be
wrong at every turn, but you can't be quiet.