Glow Ball |
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Joined: Tue Feb 02, 1999 7:00 pm Posts: 23
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I saw this last night and wanted to let the racers get in first. Now I'll add my two cents.
THE IDEAYou have two sides to the idea. Tournaments and prizes.
For tournaments, we're behind you one hundred percent. Whether you work with the established guys, or just coordinate with them is entirely your call, but most people will be willing to check out your tourneys, and, if they're well done, will continue to participate for as long as you over see them. Absolutely, people rarely shun good things. Scheduling is just a technicality. You'll work it out if you're serious about this.
Prizes are an entirely different matter. To my knowledge, there have been three competitions for prizes. Of those, two were for making addons (<a href="http://cownap.com/~mtmg/contests/summer99/" target="_blank">Summer 99</a> and <a href="http://cownap.com/~mtmg/contests/dec99/" target="_blank">Winter 99</a>), and one was commercially sponsored by toyota (tundra). There were two others for addons (<a href="http://cownap.com/~mtmg/contests/expo2000/" target="_blank">Expo 2000</a> and <a href="http://cownap.com/~mtmg/contests/expo2003/" target="_blank">Expo 2003</a>) but anything handed out was for merit, the competition staying friendly and fun. There have been a couple other events of minor consequence. And while there's no way we can match toyota, I can speak with authority when I say handling prizes is a complicated, time consuming and expensive proposition. Even the caps we sent out this year far exceeded our original estimations. And to do that on a weekly, or even monthly (or bi-monthly), basis seems exorbitant. Not to mention the question of what to do if the same person wins three or four times in succession. For these reasons, I recommend finding alternate methods of acknowledgement and reward. There's plenty of things you could do, and we can address that when the project takes on more solid form. WHY?You don't need reasons why. If it's a good idea to you, then others will agree (recognizing, of course, there's no pleasing everybody). As for giving things back, you can still do that through points or series or special events scheduled among the regular tourneys. Nobody says events have to be all or nothing. Holding respectable tourneys on a regular basis is what most of these guys want. Delivering that IS giving something in return. Then, a prize tourney that, say, celebrates the release of a new track is icing on the cake. But get established, get the audience, then you'll be free to spice up the fun at any time you're ready to do it. MONEYPeople pay for hobbies, they pay for web sites and domain names, so why not a tourney. Nothing idiotic about that. The trick is to maximize limited resources, and the challenge is keeping at it, not giving up, even when things run short. PROBLEM/HELPAs far as I know, all you have to do is contact the zone and let them know you want to host a tourney on their site. They are usually pretty reasonable about accommodating whatever you need... within reason. Regarding web space, start small on a free server like geocities. Make your presence felt; it can grow from there. We've seen hundreds of people try to begin with a big splash and then peter out a few weeks later. It takes time and committment. Without that, web space doesn't matter. WHO THE HELL ARE YOU?The question of who you were is less important than who you are, or will become. Your destiny is your own. But in mtm2 and from a reputable tourney point of view, coming and going won't establsh much. If you're serious, we'll see lots more from you. If you're not, so it goes.
Regarding time, yes, it takes time. That's the committment part.
Regarding going it alone. No, nobody is alone around here. But by the same token, nobody is going to do it for you. Everybody sets the tasks they want to perform, and plays out their roles. Mine, lately, is this web site. Others head up teams or make tracks or truck. Others still, make other sites or programs. If your thing is to do tourneys, then great. The more the merrier. At the same time, understand that leadership means doing things other people can't/won't/refuse to do. There are days that can feel onerus, but it isn't so bad. A crowded tourney room should be its own reward. FINAL THOUGHTSIt's your idea. Don't hand off the ball before it even gets going. If this is your niche, then run with it. If it isn't, then please don't try to make more work for others. People will join you, but it's unlikely they'll pick up and change on somebody's say so. After all, people are already trying to do their own thing anyway. A touney cannot work without organizaton, and it cannot work without racers. It's a community thing, it's not a yours and mine thing. Where you fit into that scheme is your choice. But I know for a fact, that if it's well done and responsible, you won't be able to keep the racers away. That's what racers do.
Anyway, I hope you do get it together. Good luck with it.
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