So over the past month I've been noticing people complaining about punishments and how it's not fair, and that a new system should be implemented. Now, don't get me wrong, I believe the current system is very fair.What throws a monkey wrench into this system is the whole "I'm not sure how long this kid has been nanned for, so I'll punish him as I see fit." However, there's an extremely easy solution to this. Just have a command that staff can execute called "/automute" which lists how many times this guy has been muted, for how long, and when. It takes this information and provides an estimate of what the punishment should be. Then, the staff member types "/automute confirm" if they think the estimate is good, or they just mute the kid normally if they disagree. Example: *Staff types /automute RuleBreaker800* In the past month: RuleBreaker800 has been muted for spamming | 1 minute | 9/3/2016 3:51 PM RuleBreaker800 has been muted for excessive caps | 5 minutes | 9/3/2016 6:20 PM RuleBreaker800 has been muted for bypassing the swear filter | 20 minutes | 9/4/2016 12:02 PM Estimated Mute Time for RuleBreaker800: 1 Hour Type /automute confirm to mute RuleBreaker800. See how easy it was to get an estimate? All it required was a simple command, and the staff member could distinguish how much they should mute the person for. This system also stops people from complaining that the staff are biased, as staff can now show concrete proof that they took the command's advice for the punishment time, proving that it was unbiased. So, tell me what you think! In my opinion, this would be a great, simple system to add. Feel free to suggest something else in the comments, or tweak my idea if you wish. Thanks!
Do they? I think the only thing they have rn is the ban/mute/warning manager on the forums. It's not that quick to access, and doesn't really give you an estimation. IMO the command would still be pretty useful.
They didnt have something like this a month ago at least. I dont know if they do now. But yeah with the current system that would probably work well.
It's fine. Not really something that is relevant to everyone, so I never mentioned it publicly until now.