Individuals do train in the open now reasonably often via streaming, the issue is that it is ephemeral. A few small teams did it in the MPL era at times, but it wasn’t something one could properly follow reasonably.
If we take someone like Nassiv as an example, as far as I understand his daily schedule had time allocated for streaming and time allocated for playing with his team-mates.
Do you have a good example of a team that streamed in MPL era times where they stream a match in which they develop a new gears understanding of some aspect of magic together and communicate the process to the listener?
The streams I watched of Nassiv or Luis Scott-Vargas were not those people playing with their team mates and having discussions about what they learn in their training matches but those people playing online against other people and explaining their play decisions.
As far as training the rationality skills of the listeners, you don’t really get that by copying the play decisions from either of those. The important skill to transfer would be how to develop an understanding of the value of new cards or how to learn from the games you play which cards you should cut from your deck because they underperform as those two are much more about the skill of gears understanding.
I don’t think people do the thing you’re describing, where a team watches a match together and analyzes—either in public or in private. Closest thing would be some coverage teams doing it, but it’s just not a thing and never was.
The good streamers explain what they’re thinking and how to a large extent (Jorbs is very good at this) but tag teams are rare, as are people doing explicit thinking practice.
Sam Black is doing something along related lines at least some of the time.
There’s definitely room for big improvements in these ways, dunno if it would be popular. I’d be curious to try but the startup costs of streaming, and the need for a full commitment, make it prohibitive unless an existing streamer wanted to experiment with me. I’d be down for that.
Individuals do train in the open now reasonably often via streaming, the issue is that it is ephemeral. A few small teams did it in the MPL era at times, but it wasn’t something one could properly follow reasonably.
Do you have a good example of a team that streamed in MPL era times where they stream a match in which they develop a new gears understanding of some aspect of magic together and communicate the process to the listener?
The streams I watched of Nassiv or Luis Scott-Vargas were not those people playing with their team mates and having discussions about what they learn in their training matches but those people playing online against other people and explaining their play decisions.
As far as training the rationality skills of the listeners, you don’t really get that by copying the play decisions from either of those. The important skill to transfer would be how to develop an understanding of the value of new cards or how to learn from the games you play which cards you should cut from your deck because they underperform as those two are much more about the skill of gears understanding.
I don’t think people do the thing you’re describing, where a team watches a match together and analyzes—either in public or in private. Closest thing would be some coverage teams doing it, but it’s just not a thing and never was.
The good streamers explain what they’re thinking and how to a large extent (Jorbs is very good at this) but tag teams are rare, as are people doing explicit thinking practice.
Sam Black is doing something along related lines at least some of the time.
There’s definitely room for big improvements in these ways, dunno if it would be popular. I’d be curious to try but the startup costs of streaming, and the need for a full commitment, make it prohibitive unless an existing streamer wanted to experiment with me. I’d be down for that.