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Stop day trading (thread closed)

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This Post:
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9808.494 in reply to 9808.488
Date: 6/30/2009 4:08:18 AM
Kitakyushu
ASL
Overall Posts Rated:
12351235
You can't put SuperFly in the Cat. Because he buys players to protect his real players from being injured in Cup/bot games. I actually did this myself last week. I had a SF get injured so I bought a semi-shitty PG and ran my backup PG(6'10) at SF.. Now that my SF is back from injury, I am selling that PG. SuperFly does the same things but on a bigger scale because he has BB3 games, and doesn't want to risk an injury to Zadot(183,000 a week player) in a bot game.. peace

This Post:
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9808.495 in reply to 9808.494
Date: 6/30/2009 4:31:03 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
959959
mayyn other transfer o f this kind are also make, to let the star players stay in good minutes.

I would say 80% of my transfers, and of many teams are crappy players who are fired instantly after doing their jobs.

This Post:
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9808.496 in reply to 9808.495
Date: 6/30/2009 4:41:53 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
196196
Heres a radical idea.

Why not make the minimum purchase for a player $100.000

maybe a touch less but make it relative to the league you are in?

This Post:
00
9808.497 in reply to 9808.496
Date: 6/30/2009 4:44:18 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
959959
to avoid those minute killers, in this case i would say we got more traders ... Because the minutes killers themself often have bad minutes and crappy GS - sometimes they won't play a minute in a week etc.

This Post:
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9808.498 in reply to 9808.494
Date: 6/30/2009 6:08:46 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
167167
lol... i have read most posts in this thread and i am sorry to say but this is the louziest excuse/reason you can come up with?

not ment this offensively but come on, you cant tell me he buys backups to make sure his players dont get injured 2 or 3 times a week... You would keep these back ups and train them and at end off season or so sell them, before salary goes up (in case that is an issue for him).... He buys them to sell them to make a profit. there is no other reason than that.

had a look at globetrotters max profit on sales. dont think 5 million over 2 years is that much. considering the time he must spend on this game... Especially when top players go for 3-4 million.


This Post:
00
9808.499 in reply to 9808.498
Date: 7/1/2009 12:31:08 AM
Kitakyushu
ASL
Overall Posts Rated:
12351235
Just because the players he buys for this purpose are expensive doesn't mean that is not the reason he does it.I bought a $2000 player just to play in two games, where as he buys a $200,000 player for the same purpose..For a team of him caliber it just isn't 2-3 games, with the BB3 it is more like 4 must win games a week. And it wasn't an excuse because what he is doing isn't day trading. Peace

This Post:
00
9808.500 in reply to 9808.498
Date: 7/1/2009 12:44:39 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
196196
lol... i have read most posts in this thread and i am sorry to say but this is the louziest excuse/reason you can come up with?

not ment this offensively but come on, you cant tell me he buys backups to make sure his players dont get injured 2 or 3 times a week... You would keep these back ups and train them and at end off season or so sell them, before salary goes up (in case that is an issue for him).... He buys them to sell them to make a profit. there is no other reason than that.

had a look at globetrotters max profit on sales. dont think 5 million over 2 years is that much. considering the time he must spend on this game... Especially when top players go for 3-4 million.



Buying a $1k scrub is only good for a scrimmage to stop you from defaulting the game.

A $1-20k scrub if played in meaningful matches isnt going to steal sufficient minutes away from starters.

Not purely to save injuries but a decent $500-$1mil back up can get 70mins a week to allow trainees to be interchanged in position. Leaving someone competent in their natural position so you can train a big man in OD or a guard in RB is as valuable as them being able to absorb minutes away from your regulars (assuming you can get away with it)

The transfer differences are somewhat distorted because of tax paid and also free agents that are re-sold that somehow appear on your history.

The profit certainly isn't huge - I'm not a day trader :D

This Post:
00
9808.501 in reply to 9808.492
Date: 7/1/2009 6:03:14 AM
Overall Posts Rated:
406406
Clarification to people,

I was hoping when I joined this game that I was iimmediately going to be competing with eveyrone who plays it.

I see now that that is not the way the game is designed to be.


The game is designed to allow beginners to compete from the beginning BUT this works only in big leagues like USA, Spain...

Reason is that in smaller countries you start in a league where teams already played a few seasons and have developed their players, arenas and so on. In my country the third league is filled with bots or inactives and the second league is filled with teams who have 5+ 10-20k salary players - the gap is just way too big.

If new teams would be put in weak leagues they could compete in almost nobody would waste time day trading imo.

This Post:
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9808.503 in reply to 9808.501
Date: 7/1/2009 8:26:32 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
00
IMO playing bots is not competing. That and I meant competing even with people who'd been playing awhile.
Honestly I don't see a lot of user control at this point in the game play. Its all simulated based on a few decisions from user.

This Post:
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9808.504 in reply to 9808.503
Date: 7/1/2009 9:29:12 PM
Overall Posts Rated:
459459
Weird that a sim game should be simulated. The game is about managing a basketball franchise- arena, personnel, training, tactics, and economy. It's neither a first-person shooter nor a coaching simulator.

Once I scored a basket that still makes me laugh.
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