Reporting a premade group

Mexicasian556·9/10/2017, 5:50:48 AM·1 votes·523 views

Does anyone else feel like their reports mean nothing sometimes? I just played a game with a bard adc that was griefing all game, and I'm pretty sure he was in a premade with everyone else. Since i was the only person not in their group, I'm pretty sure I was the only person to report them, and subsequently my report wont have a high enough priority to warrant a suspension/ban. So, in order to deal with things like these I propose adding a way for players to rate their ban, in terms of priority, so that behavior like this wont go unpunished. The drawback to a system like this would be players flagging all their reports as top priority making the system moot. Does anyone else have any thoughts on the matter?

2 Comments

Deep Terror Nami9/10/2017, 5:56:17 AM3 votes

Reports don't have any sort of weight with the Instant Feedback System. All reports result in reviewing that player's behavior in the game immediately afterwards. Reviews do not have any sort of sensitivity levels, so 1 report is exactly the same as 9.

Basically, don't worry about your reports not being useful, or premade/mass reporting unfairly resulting in a punishment.

Tiddlywinks9/12/2017, 1:46:49 AM1 votes

{quoted}

Does anyone else feel like their reports mean nothing sometimes? I just played a game with a bard adc that was griefing all game, and I'm pretty sure he was in a premade with everyone else. Since i was the only person not in their group, I'm pretty sure I was the only person to report them, and subsequently my report wont have a high enough priority to warrant a suspension/ban. So, in order to deal with things like these I propose adding a way for players to rate their ban, in terms of priority, so that behavior like this wont go unpunished. The drawback to a system like this would be players flagging all their reports as top priority making the system moot. Does anyone else have any thoughts on the matter?

I'll keep on fighting the good fight by busting the "number of reports matter" myth, post by post.

Even one report is enough.