Edoras wrote:
Thuban wrote:
Gilgi has received a small penalty and had her paragon status revoked for the following:
- Giving a medium reward despite minimal interaction with the recipient.
I was under the impression that PAR, as an OOC title, wouldn't have -required- IC interaction with the PAR character in order to be valid.
As an example, if I had a PAR and I was playing an alt where I encountered someone who had exceptional roleplay, I would think it perfectly valid to use my reward for that day as PAR for the person, even a medium reward: That should be my discretion.
It's also been a very common practice for other players who were playing PARs to ask me for someone to enlight because they wanted to use their enlight for the day, and I'd recommend someone who they would then enlight off of my recommendation. I've done this myself as well, trusting the word of the player I was asking. I would not have gathered the idea that this was against the rules according to the help file on PAR. It's an OOC title, why should rewards be hamstrung to IC interaction with the IC character?
So what was the rule being violated here? Is it illegal to reward someone you've never interacted with on the PAR character? If that's allowed, is it instead illegal to reward someone you've never met in-game at all, even if it's on the word of one of another player you know and trust? For as long as I can remember, it's been commonplace to reward someone based off of another's recommendation or maybe even off of a log you read on Lord Voldemort's website. I'd think that players of PARs in general would benefit from the answer to this question.
The hypotheticals you describe would be permissible, except for rewarding someone based on a log that you saw posted somewhere. The problem with rewarding someone based on a posted log is that someone might get multiple rewards from paragons who read it at different times and think it's reward-worthy.
Nothing you mentioned happened in this instance. All of those possibilities (and others) were investigated and ruled out. The violation was as stated. The player had minimal interaction with the character that was rewarded and gave a medium reward. Even a small reward would be suspicious when you're talking about a couple of minutes of interaction across the lifetime of the rewarded character and paragon, even if you include all of the paragon's alts, but a medium reward is quite obviously an abuse of the paragon power to give rewards. Paragons are not supposed to hand out rewards at random or for no legitimate reason. As per Rule 9, the player was asked to provide any sort of documentation or reasoning for the reward, and no log or satisfactory reasoning was supplied.
If I may ramble a moment, let me say that I would love to have had any reason to not give a penalty, because I like this player just like I like almost all of the players I've had to penalize, even the ones who have nothing good to say about me, but I don't think the staff or the players want me to just ignore rules violations when I see them or play favorites. It's like being a referee in a soccer game. No player likes getting a yellow card, the coaches and teammates sometimes get furious at a ruling, and fans think the referees are morons and question their judgment, but the game requires a referee to function properly (for now, anyway, until a computer can do it better). All I'm doing is handing out yellow and red cards here, a mandatory task that my job requires, not anything personal. The players are still the stars of the show and should dust themselves off and keep playing.