Why Fool Is A Bad Class

You have to be suspicious enough to be hung but not so susp that one of the numerous BD killers nightkills you. It is not the hardest win-con but it is not brainless. I imagine the alchemist win-rate is far higher than that of fools.

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Imagine this. A neuts out reaper.

Your dream probally

Itā€™s not that hard to balance out providing that you donā€™t have a trigger-happy King or BD-Killing role. If youā€™re basically confirmed as evil and one of the killer roles are alive, youā€™re dead. But if youā€™re only suspicious with an extremely flakey claim, then most Princes and Knights will probably approach you with caution as they donā€™t want to be slapped with the penalties of killing a BD. Kings and Hunters are less forgiving as they donā€™t receive any mechanic punishments from killing a BD.

except, you know, killing a BD

I was confirmed as evil.

But we hanged king so we couldnā€™t do anything.

The next day I accused the pally who accused me.

I donā€™t know how I didnā€™t die at all I NEVER DIED

if there is a BD who is acting like a fool I donā€™t think they will be missed tbh

Yes, but if youā€™re a CW claim with no confirmed swaps, who happens to have claimed d5 and has been silent the majority of the game, while having a scum-like voting pattern, and thereā€™s already a CW in the graveyard then eliminating the CW claim is not a big loss as it also gets rid of a prime suspect, allowing BD to focus on other scummy players.

This is basically assuming that BD has yet to lose majority and that the remaining BD players donā€™t have the collective IQ of 80.

Fair point

But the punishment is arbitrarily set by the devs

Things that others decide to punish you for are not always incorrect, not by a long shot

it would be much much worse if there was no punishment

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Itā€™s kind of confusing since you are getting punished for doing the right townie thing but at the same time itā€™s your fault for getting that fool hung

Itā€™s like a paradox

Thatā€™s not the point, the point is that just because you get punished for it does not make it the wrong choice in all circumstances - especially when the punishment is for doing something that would otherwise be of tangible benefit to you and others.

Itā€™s called bad game design.

RTSDGs can get away with using it to cover up deeper, more foundational balance issues. This is made even easier if they cater to a primarily casual audience.

However, that does not make it a good idea.

I also think you overstate the paradoxical nature of the role these mechanics play. It turns eliminating a player that may act against you (and is actively encouraged to do so), which is otherwise a good thing, into a relatively bad thing, while making it hard to distinguish between the two beforehand. There is no cycle, the logic ends there.

kā€¦

It does not punish eliminating your enemy, it punishes eliminating your enemy in a specific way which could often easily be avoided by eliminating them differently.

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If the Prince is dead and the Hunter non-existant you have no reliable way to distinguish a suspected Fool or Mastermindā€¦

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The best fool strat

Is to claim fool tbh

It doesnā€™t make people doubt already confirmed investigatives though, at least not like fool does.

Not often enough. People still randomly accuse.

They have to gain the trust of the BD first.

Not always. Just donā€™t execute them and leave them to the prince/king/knight.

Thereā€™s nothing wrong with that. It makes people doubt confirmed investigatives.

Actualy exactly scorned does that exactly like fool does. And for the same reason too. Scorned has a frame. More uses than foolā€™s infact.

This is in a world where the fool exists.