NNL Qualifier Event hosted at Movement Lab in Hainesport, New Jersey!!
- backyard ninja warrior: okay okay ikr
- Avery Starr: Lift Pizzas every athlete had just as much of a chance to clear it
- Lift Pizzas: It's more like people fell because it was an obstacle they'd not encountered before. But "why" is still irrelevant. The bottom line is that the first obstacle eliminated far more than any other obstacle, so it shouldn't have been first. The course designer (Naj) should have known that and accounted for it in the design process.
- Avery Starr: This week the conquer ningia warrior comp. People failed the 1st obstacle. That doesn't mean it's bad, it makes it exciting. There is no formula to NNL. Surprising people off the gate is exciting. The competitors should not expect to see every obstacle cleared
- Lift Pizzas: IMO putting a tough obstacle at the beginning is bad course design and not cool. It sucks for the competitors who pay money to run the course and wait around forever for their turn. And it sucks for the viewers because it increases the ratio of time spent just sitting around between runs.
- Google Slides daily Dogew00f: When will the reward ceremony take place?
- Lift Pizzas: So the people who failed the rope are stupid? Seems legit.
- Lift Pizzas: That has nothing to do with anything I said. You're still completely missing the point. When the first obstacle eliminates more competitors than any other obstacle, the course is poorly designed. The problem is that *that* obstacle was first. The order and nature of the obstacles makes a big difference to the experience of the competitors and spectators. It matters. That's why courses are *designed* instead of being randomly generated. That's what design _means_. It's arranging things with the intention to improve or optimize. If the arrangement detracts from the experience instead, then it's by definition a poor design. Eliminating so many people on the first obstacle -- which unnecessarily and substantially decreases the number of obstacles people got to try against -- is a bad thing, for both spectators and participants. It's poor design. The course designer should have realized this was going to happen and put that obstacle elsewhere. That's what "designing" is all about.
- Connor The God: NOOOOO Adam Rayl!!!!!
- Avery Starr: People who fell made stupid mistakes that does mean it separates the great from the amazing
M Lab Pro NNL Stream Part 2 | |
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People & Blogs | Upload TimeStreamed live on 25 Nov 2017 |
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