Great game everyone.

I'm a little late to the post-game comments party, since I've been at work, but I'll try to answer what I can (and I'll add some more later... have to go out again in a bit). Also, my apologies if I answer things the other wolves have already addressed; I'm not going to read these three pages just to cross-reference comments already replied to.
Crux wrote:Well played. I'm curious... why triggercut? That was the turning point of the whole game, and it seemed completely random.
Actually, you're partly to blame for that one. The night before we killed triggercut, both he and Aenima took soft shots at accusing chaosraven of being a wolf. Making it conceivable that one of them was the Seer, we applied the lesson you taught us in the last game (that the Seer should only make an accusation after getting someone to "front" for him), and lynched triggercut as the more likely Seer of the two for making his accusation second.
Crux wrote:I'm very curious to hear the rationale behind their early kills because that was when the game was decided.
Grundbegriff: too analytical, too dangerous.
CSL: random shot in the dark at taking out the Seer, based on the idea that the Seer would try to fly under the radar early in the game. CSL hadn't posted much, so.........
triggercut: see above.
Cesare: another shot at the Seer, based on a list of likely suspects compiled by Orinoco (which he based on people's posts and accusations to date). Third time's the charm, as they say.
Spiff: for being named as a known innocent in the PM where you revealed Cesare as the Seer.
Crux: the only "known innocent" left, removing the only pillar around which the villagers could draw any form of certainty about their choices.
One other comment about Crux: we really did want to kill him on the second night, like I said at one point in the thread to defend myself against his accusation towards me. But for ages he seemed so totally lynchable, by virtue of setting himself up opposite the ultimately-innocent Kelric. It was bad luck for us that his posting the Seer PM made him instantly unlynchable. After that PM, it was just a matter of time as we used our night kills to work through the people remaining from that list.
Posting the Seer PM was a bit of a blessing and a curse for the villagers. While it gave you some certainty in terms of who to trust, it also gave
us certainty - certainty that the Seer was dead, and certainty in who we needed to kill over the next couple nights.
Gryndyl wrote:I was probably never near the top of the wolves' grocery list.
Nope, I don't recall discussing killing you even once in the entire game.
Crux wrote:It really all comes down to information. The wolves had it all, and we had none.
What really hurt you was the bad luck in not getting even one of the wolves, even by accident. Voting records are of limited use when every person lynched is innocent. Where they become properly meaningful is when you can compare who voted against innocents versus who voted (and who
didn't vote) against guilties. Our luck in getting the Seer, and your luck in not getting, say, chaosraven, instead of Leigh on day one, rendered your primary analysis tool probably more than 50% useless.
Padre wrote:msteelers was lynched after much discussion and a slightly dodgy voting count (again, sorry! Although I imagine one of the wolves who hadn't yet voted for him would have jumped in sooner or later to seal his fate).
For the record, and I know I told you this privately Padre, I would have done so only a couple hours after you killed him. So it really didn't make much difference.
Padre wrote:The day's voting saw a change of tack from Asharak, who went form following the crowd to leading it with apparently-well-argued but actually very deceptive arguments.
Anyway, Asharak seemed to garner some suspiscion for doing so, but ultimately it was J.D who got hanged. At several points Asharak even managed to persuade people to drop their votes for him, which was just marvellous to see.
This was, indeed, where the game became absolutely rivetting for me. And you're dead on: it was a very conscious change of strategy for me. With the majority of the village now dead, the odds of the mob randomly picking a wolf go up - so the importance of guiding the debate rises. It was a risk, but less of one now (when it gets hard to hang someone without support from at some of the wolves) than it would have been earlier in the game. By the time I spoke up, near-unanimity in the village would have been required to lynch me. It did get close once or twice, though. I think I briefly had four votes against me in the majority-of-five day.
It was also fun. My apologies to both Crux and Remus West for the bald-faced lies I told you, the former via a long MSN conversation and the latter via PM.
Gryndyl: the irony of the PM I sent you was that I was really only attempting to you get you to drop your vote against me. And I actually assumed, since you never replied to it, that you hadn't bought it. If scamming Remus into voting with us had fallen through, I was actually going to post that PM in public and accuse you of being a wolf for not even being willing to talk to me about it.

I was floored when I snuck a peak at the forums from work and saw that you were the one to seal Aenima's fate. Orinoco was actually holding his vote to await seeing Padre in the forum (to avoid giving people time to change their votes once the majority was reached).
Gryndyl wrote:Yeah, my "helpful" chart threw me off for the entuire rest of the game
Which was, of course, why I praised it so much.
Also, since I made this post around the same time as you posted that chart, it wasn't coincidence that I proposed my "the quiet people are guilty" theory at the same time that I stopped being quiet. I was rather worried that someone would pick up on that.
Padre wrote:The important lesson to learn is - if the seer exonerates you and tells you such, stay alive.
This was the big downside of Crux's posting of the "Seer PM". I honestly don't know what I would have done in his situation. If he doesn't post it, he probably gets lynched immediately after Kelric shuffles off innocent. If he posts it, he buys himself, one the most dangerous single players in the game, time, but exposes a couple allies. In retrospect he should have taken one for the team, but I can see where his dilemma was during the game.
Crux wrote:Or, as we saw in this game, by the random mob.
But the mob didn't neutralize you. We did. As above, I completely understand why you revealed the PM. But it did lead directly to the consecutive executions of everyone named in it.
- Ash