I generally don't do long posts, I generally do short posts commenting about what I think about developments, or theorysing and responding to people's questions. My attacks on people, instead of being long posts are always put in several posts, with me adding on to them as time goes on.
You didn't do much theorizing or thinking, though. You talked to roo and gave single-line replies to questions directed at you. You didn't attack anyone other than roo, or discuss—I don't think any of your one-line replies could be counted as "discussion", though it's possible I overlooked one—anything not related to roo. Again, this went on for six days.
I was nearly certain that tempacc was town throughout the whole day, and after a point, none of you ever changed anything (your votes generally stayed on Temp acc) which in turn meant I didn't change anything.
Why would
we change anything? TempAcc had stopped defending himself entirely, and we had no real reason to believe he wasn't scum. It was on
you to change things.
...Which, to be fair, you tried to do—albeit with an argument that only worked if you were assumed to be town, which is pretty useless for everyone else.
If I was scum, this conveluted plan makes no sense. I would get the godfather to push a lynch on a town member, then try to get my godfather vengekilled?? It makes infinately more sense to put pressure on another townie so that THEY can get vengekilled which means day one win. Why extend the game longer than it needs to be? Makes no sense.
(Note: This conversation is a bit confusing, so I may have misunderstood it. What I think Reverie is accusing OSG of is engineering roo's vengekill to gain towncred.)
You had been attacking roo the entire game, so it would make sense for you to continue to do so. If, on the other hand, you had suddenly pushed for the lynch of someone entirely different, it might have stood out as suspicious. Furthermore, pushing for the lynch of the godfather would give you a ton of towncred D2, which would be pretty useful. Not as useful as a flat-out win, obviously, but useful.
FYI, I'm not sure I agree with this argument; though it seems possible, it
is pretty convoluted. I'm going to think on it.