@AnymanKanno I was watching this route in the 2019 All Ideas video after circumark's last stream. I want this to work, plan on having fun with it when i plug in my console next
@AnymanKanno I've wondered for so long if there was another way to do this and this might be it.
Still so hard but you fixed the angle while also being really fast
@circumark994 @ikori_mario I think that is a common opinion. Cheese is not the spokesperson for the community and it was click-bait.
I cant speak for the English community either, but I think a lot of people do see this as controversial (but no one should be suggesting that ikori is cheating).
@circumark994 @ikori_mario The videos that were made in the last week are inflammatory and not representative of the whole community over here.
But it does feel like a discussion is wanted and a decision (either way) is to be made.
@Andrewgspeedrun I also don't think the answer is coming in this thread/Twitter conversation. Just cool to see what other communities might think. Every game is gonna have nuance to push it one way or another.
@Andrewgspeedrun I would want the input display wild west of 2 years ago to be unaccounted for. What was done then should be legal under current rules.
@Andrewgspeedrun Well, it's not something we have to think about here really bc sm64 has lag and no emulator can ever match it.
That thought experiment has been played out and the response is "a cheater is going to cheat regardless of the rules". If they do this, they'll do something else.
@Andrewgspeedrun The thing is, ideally we do not create rules with the idea of enforceability in mind.
If it's enforceable, that's an added benefit. But things like the analog to digital rule, are really hard to enforce if people were trying to cheat.
@Andrewgspeedrun My opinion is that we should allow input display but disallow certain things in input displays:
A) Color indicators to tell you angle
B) Number values
C) Other forms of discretely telling your angle (tick marks outside of UDLR)
One thought is a whitelist of displays