If you were designing a beginner-friendly Mostly Vanilla game, how would you balance out that 45%, knowing that one alignment cop is working on alternate nights?
That seems like more of a question to ask Fallacy.
I might start by putting two or three of the powers that can affect investigations (mine and possibly TM's and even more possibly MM's redirect) in town hands to discourage them from
using them in a way that would affect investigations. I know mine seems to have been designed as a millstone to keep me from doctoring too much, or maybe the other way around. Next, I don't think there's another alignment cop who only investigates on even nights; I think there's another alignment cop with a totally different modifier (and RGU has something else to do on even nights, whether another ability or the scumkill). I could probably give you more suggestions if I wanted to put much thought into it, but I just woke up.
I also feel like Fallacy plays a harsher game than the rest of you might be expecting. He may well be
expecting people to have enough sense to eg. double-check their night results on a second night; I know I would, as a GM. A game being beginner-friendly just means, to me, that it should be
easy to understand, not that town can win without being competent.
You're asking RGU to ignore his guaranteed sane night result. How is what he's doing any different to what you're doing?
I would ask
anyone to not ignore but
reflect on a night result (on anyone) before lynching someone based on it in any game in which night results are not certain, eg, this one. If I were trying to convince him that he was mafia and he knew he wasn't, that would be one thing, but I am trying to convince him that his
evidence is insufficient, while he is trying to convince me that
the GM lied to me in my setup PM. Those are different things.
One example of the appeal to emotion is suggesting that accepting a guaranteed sane night result is dumb and bad play.
Saying that something is bad and dumb isn't an appeal to anything or even an argument, but just a prelude to an argument. Again, that's just how I talk (bro). Think of it as my thesis statement. I state that relying on a night result presumptively is bad and dumb, and then I explain why: because there are always factors you might not have accounted for that could explain why you're wrong, and you need to take a breath and think it through and
play the daygame to figure out whether your night result is really what you think it is. Not playing the daygame is just, well, bad and dumb. Also, just for reference, I hadn't even
heard of sanities before now; I've never played a game that used them before. So you can rehash that the result is "guaranteed sane" all you want but it doesn't affect my argument in the slightest, which was always that there are
external reasons to doubt it.
You quoted Arthur Conan Doyle up there, but I would suggest that requires all the facts. In this instance, that would mean knowing all the roles in play and what action they took during the night. Given we don't have that, and even if everyone claimed both, we know there are at least two players obfuscating that knowledge,
The quote from Holmes applies to
me here, not you. For me, it is impossible that I am scum, therefore I must assume that some other thing is the truth. Obviously you don't know that I'm not scum, that's the point of the game, so for you the situation naturally differs. In that paragraph I was explaining
my perspective.
But,
thus necessitating we fall back on good ol' Occam's Razor: the hypothesis requiring the fewest assumptions - that RGU's guaranteed sane cop investigation is correct - is likely true.
Occam's Razor has never been all it's cracked up to be, honestly.
a) what use would a SK get from having an alignment investigating ability?
Well, I posited one potential gain earlier, which is that he can use it to appear trustworthy to town. It would generally be useful for identifying mafia and other third-parties (especially cult, who are in direct competition with the SK and should be eliminated immediately), that information to be used however the player thinks best. What use would anyone get from having an alignment investigating ability? What use would anyone get from having
additional information to which other players are not privy? Whatever use you can make of it. Even scum could gain by using it to suss out third-parties. In fact, scum probably gains more by knowing who
not to use it on.
b) you have postulated various scenarios in which RGU gets an accurate result while you remain town, but you don't seem to be postulating that RGU is gambiting scum. Why not? Is that situation less feasible than him being redirected to actual scum, or the second framer/fourth falsifying-investigation role targeting you the same night? What makes you give that answer?
Not at all (less feasible); I just can't prove or disprove whether he is scum, so I see no point arguing it, it would be no more clarifying than him arguing that I am. Besides, my gut isn't really telling me that he's scum. Maybe he is, it wouldn't be the first time scum has felt third-party to me or vice-versa, but as of right now that isn't my
default position.
c) do you think there's a simpler explanation that could convince us that you're right and RGU is wrong? Is there a simpler explanation that could convince us that you're both right?
Define "simpler". And don't give me any crap about 'fewer assumptions', I am already assuming that other humans have consciousness, that causality and logic and mathematics actually work as defined, that everything I think I see and remember is not just a single momentary frame-capture out of an endless roiling chaos which will be obliterated in the next moment (even now as I finish typing this parenthetical!) (the trick is that, once i finished typing it, my memory of having typed it was
part of that momentary structure, preëxisting and equally false) and replaced by some other fleeting structure; from where I'm standing the assumptions look infinite on every side.
But yes, I can name other arguments if you like, though, again, I just woke up, I don't want to put too much effort into it. Maybe RGU is just lying, made a too-ballsy move and now can't safely walk it back, or is even counting on the audacity of it to make everyone believe 'there's no way he would've done that on purpose!'; I know I've certainly done that last thing before, many times, relying on the refrain of "do you really think I'm stupid enough to have thought that would work?" to make it work. (It usually works.) Maybe RGU is scum, maybe you're scum, maybe we're all scum. Sorry, that one actually doesn't make sense, I think I nodded a bit there. Maybe I'm a miller and don't know it, or do know it and don't want to say it for some dumb reason, or can't say it. Maybe Fallacy has been lying all along and this is actually the most bastard of bastard games, lord knows I wouldn't put it past him. Do you know he keeps trying to make catpeople? The man's clearly beyond redemption. Maybe there isn't even any mafia, maybe this is a town-vs.-third-party game with abilities designed to mislead us into
thinking there's a mafia. (That would actually be hilarious.) Maybe I was just framed, wait, no, that's not "simple" enough in your worldview, never mind. Maybe I'm even actually scum and there really is still another framer in the game, I guess that would technically make us both partially right. Maybe I'm just a lowly fruit vendor and this whole thing is an illusion created by MM's practical-joke JOAT powers or TM's "totally not scum" JOAT powers. Maybe RGU doesn't even really exist, maybe this whole game is a, er, right, supposed to be taking this seriously, never mind. Maybe I need to go back to bed. For like a week. Or forever.