It's fascinating how the community must have to work to protect themselves from griefers. It only takes a few commands to release a pokemon (which happened a few days ago).
What's the threshold on parsing commands? Does it send a new command every frame, or is the emulator smart enough to let the old command "finish" before issuing a new one?
democracy seems to be a system in which everyone votes and the command which is more popular is executed (i don't know the timeframe).
to switch from one mode to the other 75% of votes are required in some timespan
Anarchy/Democracy Explained!: http://www.reddit.com/r/twitchplayspokemon/comments/1y8o60/a...
I love this comment: People are going to write dissertations on this. http://www.reddit.com/r/twitchplayspokemon/comments/1y6drw/l...
As for democracy mode, it seems to be sending a command once the top command receives 100+ votes.
"Ash" is the name of the main character from the anime. I know they're supposed to be the same guy, but serious hardcore players distinguish the two.
Of particular note is the live updates and google doc for current party status. Make it way easier to check in on progress than watching the stream itself.
(Praise Helix)
I can sort of understand why. Progress now feels inevitable rather than miraculous. There was places and menus where it is quite possible to dismiss all your pokemon permanently, or use up all the currency in the game and not be able to earn more. So the tension was quite high! Can we really risk going into a building that would let us get rid of all the pokemon?
Most amusing. Reddit in general seems to be extracting an enormous amount of fun from this. Makes me wish I was 12 again. Sort of.