Hehe, I just finished a match online that reminded me of this thread.
So, yeah, I've been on a little MTGO kick lately, maybe the past two weeks. I decided to buy a bunch of packs from the sets of the past two years and do some drafting / sealed 8-player tournaments. I've actually been doing pretty well, considering I don't know any of the sets too well (Zen/Wwk, RoE, M11, ME4)... I don't know if I'm better than I used to be or if everyone else just got worse. But that's neither here nor there.
Anyway, tonight I entered an ME4 (Master's Edition 4) 8-4 queue, which tend to be more competitive. I chose that format because I only had 3 packs of ME4 left and figured I might as well rare-draft and either end up with no prize or get lucky and get enough packs (either 4 or 8) to enter another event. I prefer to do that when I only have 3 packs of something left, as opposed to entering a 4-3-2-2 event or a Swiss event, which give better odds of winning something, but then I might end up with just one or two packs and I'd have to either sell them, open them (waste) or try to trade for a playable set of packs. Or go buy more packs to complete a set. But, I guess that's not really important.
Moving on...
So I entered this tournament and ended up drafting a white weenie deck, with a bit of blue splashed in for some counter / draw spells. I didn't think much of it, especially since I screwed up one pick by taking an Alaborn Musketeer over a second Angelic Voices and completely gave up my first pick of the last pack by grabbing Tropical Island (which alone is almost worth the price of entry). Somehow, I managed to eke out two match wins (both 2-1) against my first two opponents and made it to the finals (woot! guaranteed 4 packs). Now this has happened to me before and usually I end up getting crushed in the finals, but I thought of myself as playing with house money at this point and didn't really care. Well, what do you know, I ended up beating my opponent. And it wasn't even that close and he really played kind of poorly (there were at least two instances where I took gambles and immediately realized they were mistakes and instead of capitalizing on them, he actually played into them) and just as I was about to beat him on the last turn in the second game, he says to me:
"This is going to cost me a lot of rating points."
Now, this might seem like an innocent statement and I'm sure he didn't mean to offend me (and I wasn't offended), but the subtext of this statement is this: "I have a lot of rating points. You have very few. When a player with as many rating points as me loses to a player with as few rating points as you, the loss in rating points of the higher-rated player is much more pronounced than when a highly-rated player loses to another highly-rated player."
Or, in layman's terms: "You suck. I can't believe I lost to you."
My thoughts, in return, were as follows (in chronological order):
-You care about ratings?
-I guess you do. I'm sorry to hear that.
-Wait, you made it to the finals... isn't that good?
-Why even enter this draft if you have so much to lose?
-Unless you weren't expecting to have so much to lose.
-What scenario would cause you to lose less rating points?
-If you lost to a more highly-rated player, I suppose.
-???
-Oh I get it.
-!!!
-You suck. I can't believe you have so many rating points.
The lesson, as always, is that there's no shame in losing to a quality opponent. And by denigrating an opponent you've lost to or are about to lose to, you only make yourself look worse, by comparison.