Joined: 6/11/2006
Posts: 818
Location: Arboga, Sweden
No
No
No
Not telling where the mistakes are and keeping them for yourself so you eventually (And sometimes ending up not improving it at all, which means that the movie will be left unoptimized because secrets were not revealed (However you are not the only one keeping secrets here)) end up with the improved movie is stupid. Like the rest of my post said.
Some members say "There's the mistake, can you do something about it", while others say "There's a mistake. Not telling you where it is. Period."
Like in Zelda I. Sometimes you must wait 1 - 3 frames to get the enemies right in the next room, and to get an optimal outcome of that next room. See if one did not know that, and just said "You stopped for a frame in that room. Mistake. Voting no" or "You ran around totally unoptimized, voting no" without asking WHY (To you as a player, stopping for a frame or 2 is justified, to an observer not knowning anything about the game, stopping seems unjustified) the player stopped, would you think that it is okay?
I, personally, do not think that such behaviour is okay (I.e. claiming something to be a mistake without asking about it).
Then again, I'm (almost) from Gothenburg, Sweden.
That's it? I would have suspected something more dramatic. And you call it pride movies? Let me rephrase that. What do you do, when you find a couple of frames in the beginning of a 15 minutes or a hour+ run?
Except crying.
Usually when I find an improvement to one of my runs it's after publication, because I watch the avi with 'fresh' eyes.
I've been lucky in that all the games I've worked on have been fairly hex-friendly, so working in new discoveries during the actual process of making a TAS doesn't always mean restarting. I'm guilty of not restarting if the discovery is very minor, but usually it's worth begining again.
When Arc pointed out an opportunity to save 5 or so frames per down-elevator in Zelda 2 (working out to a few seconds over the whole run), it made me start working again.
I got together with Rising Tempest, and we wound up finding better boss strategies and an improved route.
The new version was ~44 seconds faster as a result. I probably wouldn't have even bothered to start over if Arc didn't say anything, or just left it at "I noticed some small errors".
Maybe Rising Tempest would have taken a stab at it still, I don't know.
It seems to me like that ought to be the way to TAS though.
Joined: 4/20/2005
Posts: 2161
Location: Norrköping, Sweden
Depends on what kind of game we're dealing with. If it's a short game, without much randomness, or even any at all, I would start over. But if we're dealing with a really random game, such as Mickey Mousecapade, I probably wouldn't bother. The same thing goes for if it's a terribly long game.
But, if the improvement is about 10-20 frames (or more), I would most likely start over.
Another exploded topic, I see. Good job here everyone.
Deep Loner had it right already on page 2, and I'm removing the words "pride movie" from the guidelines because it's already covered by the rules. Everyone happy? (That's a rhetorical question. I actually don't care if you are happy or not.)
Phil> And when I think my judging rights were removed because of assface like you...
No, Phil. They were revoked because of an assface like YOU. Your behaviour and nothing else caused that. Don't go blaming others.
I believe there's a difference when the speaker who cannot speak/write English eloquently refuses to learn/change his mistake (which creates an attitude problem that other people might be miffed about) as opposed to a more humble person that understands his/her fault in speaking/writing English a particularly way.
Sidenote: Naturally, "region" writing/speaking styles may tend to be an exception (color, colour, center, centre, etc), but I don't think that tends to cause a problem.
I see Truncated edited the Guidelines page.
I now see that the concept of "pride movie" was actually entered by someone else there -- it was not my text. My wording was:
Original guidelines wrote:
Play for entertainment, not for ego.
* We want movies that are entertaining to watch! We don't want people whose sole priority is to get their name/work in the list.
I hope this clears the question the original poster had.