Hi Fletch,

I was hoping to get some clarity. So for servers that aren't currently set-up 
for quick play (I'm not bothering till nocrits is allowed), are we building 
"reputation" by having people naturally play on it? Or does this 
only accrue when we are eligible and set-up for quick play?


Thanks

----- Original Message -----
From: Fletcher Dunn <[email protected]>
Date: Monday, July 11, 2011 10:25 am
Subject: [hlds] A few more TF2 quickplay answers
To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>, 
"[email protected]" <[email protected]>

> Just a few more answers to commonly-asked quickplay questions:
> 
> All of the quickplay deal-breakers are tested on the client at 
> the moment of quickplay searching.  You can flip them on 
> and off and start/stop receiving quickplay traffic.
> 
> The reputation system is an input to the quickplay scoring 
> system, not the other way around.  Doing quickplay-illegal 
> things does not affect your reputation.  If you have a 
> thriving community playing custom maps, you are building your 
> reputation.  If you suddenly turned the server into a 
> quickplay-eligible one, you would be just as good of a quickplay 
> server as a server who had been vanilla the whole time.
> 
> But to repeat: the reputation system still needs some tuning, 
> and is only a small part of the total quickplay score.  
> It's mainly designed to help avoid sending traffic to really 
> terrible servers.
> 
> Quickplay, with its minimal set of options, is currently 
> targeted at totally new players.  However, we know that 
> some experienced players use it and have had fun playing maps 
> they haven't played in a while.  (Or just beating the heck 
> out of noobs.)  Sometimes it's just fun to spin the 
> wheel.  We have considered a "medium" search mode, somewhat 
> of a cross between the raw server browser and the one-click-no-
> options quickplay.  No timeline or promises, of course.
> 
> We get *huge* value out of good server operators.  While we 
> do want to control new players first impressions of the game, 
> the goal is to have new players find all the diversity out there 
> and get into a community so they can kill each other in the way 
> they most enjoy.  Having a set of servers with known 
> characteristics is good, to ensure that if you want to play you 
> can always find a server with a good ping, etc.  But 
> keeping all the traffic on generic servers that we have to 
> maintain and host is not really a huge win for us.
> 
> I would post these answers to the FAQ and just send a link, but 
> the details are of course subject to change without notice. :)
> 
> Hopefully most of the big quickplay questions are 
> answered.  I'm working on a lot of game server related 
> stuff, so I'll probably be on these lists again.
> 
> Cheers,
> Fletch
>
_______________________________________________
To unsubscribe, edit your list preferences, or view the list archives, please 
visit:
http://list.valvesoftware.com/mailman/listinfo/hlds

Reply via email to