- 4,913
- 2,830
So here's the thing. We often have things like "higher" and "far higher" in our profiles, and our Vs debates often have things like "upscales from" or "downscales from," yet we never really have an idea for how much upscaling is worth. We don't even have a page for upscaling. Heck, I came up with this thread when I looked at Metro Man's AP rating from his profile wondering why he's considered Small Town level when he upscales from 808 tons of TNT and realized "Oh shit, we don't really have guidelines for upscaling": https://vsbattles.fandom.com/wiki/Metro_Man
So, here's the deal. While I recall statistical significance starting at 8% somewhere, I looked it up recently and noticed that statistical significance actually starts at 5%: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statistical_significance
Linking the Wikipedia article specifically because it cites an article from 2007 about the figure while other sources don't really have a citation for it. Other than that, this Harvard article recommends that you exert 70-85% of your maximum for exercise: https://www.health.harvard.edu/staying-healthy/resistance-training-by-the-numbers
This would mean if one is forced to give it their all against someone else, they would technically be exerting about 1.176470588 to 1.428571429 times what they should be exerting.
As such, we would have 3 real-world values for upscaling: 1.05x, 1.176x, and 1.429x. Still lower than the 5x we have listed for one-shotting, but still.
But how should we handle this thing? Personally, I think like one-shotting, these should only apply to the baseline values of which these things scale from, and even then, they should be considered exclusive to Vs Debates just like how our rule for one-shotting works. That's my take on the matter at least. It should handle how we handle things like "higher" and "far higher" and the like if said higher values are unknown. I'm just afraid that real profile application would cause circular scaling issues.
So yeah, that's what I can gather. Feel free to discuss.
So, here's the deal. While I recall statistical significance starting at 8% somewhere, I looked it up recently and noticed that statistical significance actually starts at 5%: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statistical_significance
Linking the Wikipedia article specifically because it cites an article from 2007 about the figure while other sources don't really have a citation for it. Other than that, this Harvard article recommends that you exert 70-85% of your maximum for exercise: https://www.health.harvard.edu/staying-healthy/resistance-training-by-the-numbers
This would mean if one is forced to give it their all against someone else, they would technically be exerting about 1.176470588 to 1.428571429 times what they should be exerting.
As such, we would have 3 real-world values for upscaling: 1.05x, 1.176x, and 1.429x. Still lower than the 5x we have listed for one-shotting, but still.
But how should we handle this thing? Personally, I think like one-shotting, these should only apply to the baseline values of which these things scale from, and even then, they should be considered exclusive to Vs Debates just like how our rule for one-shotting works. That's my take on the matter at least. It should handle how we handle things like "higher" and "far higher" and the like if said higher values are unknown. I'm just afraid that real profile application would cause circular scaling issues.
So yeah, that's what I can gather. Feel free to discuss.