I see both sides of the situation, as it can be frustrating to lose a player in a multiplayer game which you then go on to lose, while at the same time, I think the letter comes off sounding very entitled and obviously written by someone who is not a parent. However, isn't the point of playing a game to have fun? Sure, I know this is ranked, and that the very highest ranked players can actually make money from their abilities at the game, but how many of those highly ranked players actually get effected by this due to a child's poor time management?
An average player, sure, I see them being affected quite a bit, but I really doubt it happens to the really highly ranked players because my understanding is matches are set by the player ranking. A child who is actually good enough at the game to have such a high ranking and a shot at winning money from the game is most likely going to have parents who know this and will be supporting them, thus less likely to yank them out of the game at an inopportune moment. At the same time, they will probably also have more strongly established rules about when the child can or cannot play the game than the average family.
So, as an average player, does it suck if some parent pulls their child out of the game? Sure. It makes your odds of winning much lower, and in a ranked game, that can affect your rating. But again, I come back to isn't the point of playing games to have fun? Can you only have fun when you win? Sure, you may lose the game and lose some ranking, but can't you just make it up in the next game when no one drops out? Can't it be fun to hang on as long as you can in a losing battle? I know it can be, because I have had fun doing so before. That feeling is what Horde modes are based on!
As a gamer myself, I would be willing to cut my child a little slack for something like taking out the garbage or doing their homework, as long as they promise to do it as soon as the current game is finished. For things like bedtime or dinner, however, they should know better, and in those cases I would consider them to be previous commitments. You don't make a commitment to do something when you already have a commitment for that same time already. Again, a few minutes of slack for bedtime I might allow if the match was running longer than usual, as a gamer I know that can happen, but only a few minutes.
Dinner, though, I just couldn't do. After my wife and/or myself have been working in the kitchen to make dinner for the past 30-60 minutes, I think it's a great show of disrespect to not come to the dinner table when called. I know my wife gets pissed at me if she's called for dinner and I'm not there within a couple of minutes, at least without a good explanation, and I don't blame her. She worked hard to make the meal and it is really inconsiderate and unappreciative towards her to not sit and eat it. So in that case, my kid would be told to log out and get to the table.
A parent cannot watch their child constantly every second of the day, and can often only vaguely be aware of what the child is doing. Knowing your child is playing a game is one thing. Knowing exactly what game they are playing is another. If I'm busy making dinner, I can't know for a fact that my child isn't starting up a game with a long time commitment. They should know better than to do so, but kids aren't always the best at time management, no matter what their parents may have taught them. It's this knowledge that makes the letter so ridiculous. The letter should not be to the parents, who frankly don't need to give a damn about some random people on the internet losing a game, but to the children whose poor time management caused them to be forced to log out.
An average player, sure, I see them being affected quite a bit, but I really doubt it happens to the really highly ranked players because my understanding is matches are set by the player ranking. A child who is actually good enough at the game to have such a high ranking and a shot at winning money from the game is most likely going to have parents who know this and will be supporting them, thus less likely to yank them out of the game at an inopportune moment. At the same time, they will probably also have more strongly established rules about when the child can or cannot play the game than the average family.
So, as an average player, does it suck if some parent pulls their child out of the game? Sure. It makes your odds of winning much lower, and in a ranked game, that can affect your rating. But again, I come back to isn't the point of playing games to have fun? Can you only have fun when you win? Sure, you may lose the game and lose some ranking, but can't you just make it up in the next game when no one drops out? Can't it be fun to hang on as long as you can in a losing battle? I know it can be, because I have had fun doing so before. That feeling is what Horde modes are based on!
As a gamer myself, I would be willing to cut my child a little slack for something like taking out the garbage or doing their homework, as long as they promise to do it as soon as the current game is finished. For things like bedtime or dinner, however, they should know better, and in those cases I would consider them to be previous commitments. You don't make a commitment to do something when you already have a commitment for that same time already. Again, a few minutes of slack for bedtime I might allow if the match was running longer than usual, as a gamer I know that can happen, but only a few minutes.
Dinner, though, I just couldn't do. After my wife and/or myself have been working in the kitchen to make dinner for the past 30-60 minutes, I think it's a great show of disrespect to not come to the dinner table when called. I know my wife gets pissed at me if she's called for dinner and I'm not there within a couple of minutes, at least without a good explanation, and I don't blame her. She worked hard to make the meal and it is really inconsiderate and unappreciative towards her to not sit and eat it. So in that case, my kid would be told to log out and get to the table.
A parent cannot watch their child constantly every second of the day, and can often only vaguely be aware of what the child is doing. Knowing your child is playing a game is one thing. Knowing exactly what game they are playing is another. If I'm busy making dinner, I can't know for a fact that my child isn't starting up a game with a long time commitment. They should know better than to do so, but kids aren't always the best at time management, no matter what their parents may have taught them. It's this knowledge that makes the letter so ridiculous. The letter should not be to the parents, who frankly don't need to give a damn about some random people on the internet losing a game, but to the children whose poor time management caused them to be forced to log out.