Exactly right. And not just a repeat offender. As I said, when the TTD Moderation Team were discussing the complaints we got, part of the discussion was that since he has been banned before, he should remember that part of his terms for being unbanned were not to do stuff like this.
And I will repeat, we did not receive complaints about Zeen's content. The complaints were about the language and tone related to Lightzy's content and questions about whether someone who would call someone Ass Smear and make the kind of direct, personal attacks that Lightzy made actually belongs on the forum.
But I do still hope that Dan and Lightzy can sort this all out.
I do not think what Zeen did was beyond blame. I think it was a bit aggressive. But none of it is direct personal attacks. Saying someone shows some of the classic signs of narcissistic personality disorder is not quite the same as saying: You are a narcissist. But it is close.
So, Zeen, please avoid conflicts like that in the future. And when Lightzy is unbanned, please avoid commenting on his posts. Thank you.
I know what I wrote was borderline. However, I find it hard to ignore when someone constantly elevates their own opinion over everybody else. But seeing how dedicated you moderators are to the quality of this forum, I think I can be assured to just stick to being objective and friendly.
I know what I wrote was borderline. However, I find it hard to ignore when someone constantly elevates their own opinion over everybody else. But seeing how dedicated you moderators are to the quality of this forum, I think I can be assured to just stick to being objective and friendly.
Seriously, thanks for coming to this forum. Your insight perfectly aligns with mine. Usually, when someone is as aggressive as Lightzy is, you want to know something about their TT history that makes them believe they know so much. And you get absolutely nothing from Lightzy. And the small insights you get all point to playing at a level that is too low to be going around the forum insulting and bullying people based on objective superiority (not that anyone or a good player would ever do that given the complexity of the sport). The excuse that he wants to remain private is not good enough. He needs to stop engaging so rudely if he is not willing to explain why he should feel so strongly in terms that will let us respect his experience.

Anyhow, gladly I'm not the one who has to decide on this, but I think a permanent ban isn't really necessary from my point of view.
I would much more enjoy if people would know how to behave.
UpSideDownCarl; Blade: Donic Appelgren Allplay Rubbers: Xiom Vega Intro[/QUOTE said:And 72 posts later, there you have it OP. Your quest is over
Although slightly above 75USD, this is a very decent setup with enough speed, spin and tons of control. Very nice setup to develop your game.
One last comment: regardless wich setup you will choose, stick with it. At least for a 6-12 months. Don't start changing your setup every 1-2 months. Stick with the setup and learn it's cons and pros for you personally. Improve your technique to coop with the cons and to get the most out of the pros. And above all: HAVE FUN![]()
[...]
Blades:
1) Donic Appelgren Allplay
2) Stiga Allround Classic
3) Stiga Allround Evolution
4) Butterfly Grubba
5) Butterfly Primorac Off-
6) Yasaka Sweden Classic
7) Yasaka Sweden Extra
Rubbers:
1) Butterfly Sriver
2) Yasaka Mark V
3) Xiom Vega Intro
4) Xiom Vega Europe
5) Tibhar Aurus Sound
6) Nexy Karis M
If you wanted me to choose [...] otherwise known as the Der_Echte special, it would be this:
Blade: Donic Appelgren Allplay
Rubbers: Xiom Vega Intro
And 72 posts later, there you have it OP. Your quest is over
Although slightly above 75USD, this is a very decent setup with enough speed, spin and tons of control. Very nice setup to develop your game.
One last comment: regardless wich setup you will choose, stick with it. At least for a 6-12 months. Don't start changing your setup every 1-2 months. Stick with the setup and learn it's cons and pros for you personally. Improve your technique to coop with the cons and to get the most out of the pros. And above all: HAVE FUN![]()
And 72 posts later, there you have it OP. Your quest is over
Although slightly above 75USD, this is a very decent setup with enough speed, spin and tons of control. Very nice setup to develop your game.
One last comment: regardless wich setup you will choose, stick with it. At least for a 6-12 months. Don't start changing your setup every 1-2 months. Stick with the setup and learn it's cons and pros for you personally. Improve your technique to coop with the cons and to get the most out of the pros. And above all: HAVE FUN![]()
Yeah, essentially those 74 posts boils down to the 3 above ... I think it's a new record on the forum, how far can a 3 posts topic be elaborated by our experts ...
I'll save @Carl's list for myself and P1ngP0ng3r suggestion about 6-12 months period is really something to consider.
The 6-12 month idea is really excellent. It usually takes about 1 month to get fully used to a setup. And another 3-4 months to start really grooving your technique with the setup so that your technique is developing around things that are specific to the setup. Like, different handle/neck shape/sizes allow you to do different things, to loop or punch block with subtly different ways of holding.
A lot of times people are changing from one setup to the next before they can really grow with the setup they have and that actually can delay the development of certain aspects of technique. As you get to have better technique though, the melding of player/technique/equipment can happen much quicker. But not for everyone.
So, 6-12 months is an excellent rule. I actually usually tell people 3-4 months. The reason is, if after 4 months, the player does not feel the equipment is part of their hand, then, maybe something else will be more appropriate. If something is in the range of acceptable for your needs, after 3-4 months, your racket will feel like it is part of you. If it does not, like, if every time you try a friend's setup you think you wish yours felt like theirs, then, 3-4 months may be enough for you to know that something else may be better for you. But for most people 6-12 months is really the right time frame to keep using something before thinking about changing.
Now what does that say about all of us Equipment Junkies?![]()
That buying equipment is cheaper than buying cars.
Blades is an investment. Blades are forever.