Every good player should fight his lynch regardless of alignment. I would actually say that I'm fighting my lynch here LESS hard than I would if flying solo, where the reason is that I'm not sure of my partner.In post 3074, MiniDeathStar wrote:There's something I'm wondering and I'm not sure if it's due to a playstyle difference or personality difference or alignment difference or what have you.
I've been a wagon since pretty much the beginning and at some point I thought fine, I'm never surviving to endgame, and that's probably a good thing because I'm a convenient lynch. Even though I'm townreading my lover, I've been OK with being voted because it would narrow the suspect pool.
Jester, Maria and Shadow have adopted pretty much same attitude as me. Which I think is totally understandable.
But Smith's wagon has been popular for almost as long, and so far he's been incredibly resistant to it, even though he's not townreading his lover. Where does this survivalism come from? Do you think it's scum-motivated? Or too invested in the game? Or some combination of ego (to not be mislynched as town) and pride (he believes he can solve the game for town)? I just don't understand where all that resilience comes from. On one hand I think it's super admirable and I know I'll never be as good a player as that. But on the other hand it does make me a bit uncomfortable because it just feels *unnatural* to me.
If you actually go through what I've done wrt the people on me, I've been making an effort to sort them and the validity/honesty of their pushes.
Shadow and to a lesser extent jester are my suspects other than those pushing me, and I think Dunn is the worst of those who are on me. Not really sure about Maria yet tbh.