Quote:
Originally Posted by cmorioles
My point is that it is easier to do because the competition is very weak. There is no point in a big player trying to make serious money at these tracks. To devote a large amount of time to a small track like PID or WRD or LNN makes no sense.
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I agree with your overall premise. I don't buy the competition thing because a strong player should be able to win in just about any environment, and, from experience, PID is not an easy track to beat. Doesn't mean it's hard, either, just that it's 'nuanced' and take a bit of getting used to. My point is that playing a single track, whether large or small, is a dated way of going about it. While some might think that 80 hour weeks spent watching replays and keeping notes (and doing a bunch of other things) is the way to win at the game, I think this is just too much grunt work. Playing a handful of races, at best, a day is not keeping up with the times. I was reading over at your forum where someone wrote that before you can beat multiple tracks you need to be able to beat a single track. This is ridiculously banal but what's lost in this is that it's a lot easier to beat a single track than it is to beat multiple tracks.