Good idea of keeping the volatility hidden until after the season.
But, I don't understand why you don't want it shown ever? Would you mind explaining?
Even with it being shown, there is still so little we have to go on when making a decision about who to draft. In real life, teams have tons of information at their disposal to consider when deciding who to draft or not draft (it doesn't mean they get it right all the time).
We have
nothing, other than some skill ratings that quite frankly don't make much sense in many cases.
Why are there no RBs who come into the pros already knowing how to run while carrying the ball?
Or how to hold on to it?
Why does a high pass block rating not mean the player is good at pass blocking?
etc., etc. I consider volatility to be similar to a scout saying:
High volatility: "This guy could be a superstar, or he could be a bust".
Low volatility: "He won't be much better than you expect, but he won't be much worse either".
I know it hasn't helped me have better drafts, but at least it's something else I can take into consideration when drafting.
It has even led me to actually make some of my late round picks by thinking "there's a chance" a player might boom in TC (
but they never do more than 3-5 points, so I cut them anyway).
Normally I would just give away these picks or let the Ai draft
(gasp!), then cut them.
Last edited at 11/23/2016 7:06 am