I don't see anything in the original that translates into the bolded part.xorxes wrote: ↑Fri May 01, 2020 11:08 pmWho would benefit from janitoring Donny?
Town is worse off in this scenario because we do not know his alignment while scum does know, and so there are no connections to be found. But because that is too simplistic I'm going to pull wifom and say that Donny was scum (who got janitored by scum).
I can't see town janitoring him regardless of what his alignment is.
His role is important, yes, but there's no point in discussing what his role was since everyone who knows, already knows and is obscuring the fact, and everyone who doesn't know won't know.
And the last part I don't see how it matches with the original either, but anyway.
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BismarckAlive wrote: ↑Thu Apr 30, 2020 3:14 amWas just thinking about the whole Donny role speculation.
Who would benefit more from obscuring it with their powers at Donny's lynch? Islanders, or Enemies?[Who would benefit from janitoring Donny?]
Logic would tell me that us Islanders are worse off, because we can't 100% use all Donny's interactions as sure-tells about Donny's accomplices if he is Enemy, or his Enemies if he was Islander.
[Town is worse off in this scenario because we do not know his alignment while scum does know, and so there are no connections to be found.]
So that is why I am leaning to thinking Donny was Enemy. [But because that is too simplistic I'm going to pull wifom and say that Donny was scum]
I read it this way because it seemed like he made a leap and left out a sentence in between, because of the way he started the previous one with "Logic says" - implying that his following statement is "analysis a step further", and seemingly illogical.
It's follows the format of "Although normally x means y, [going more into it] x means z"
I can't see any reason why an Islander would obscure the lynch target's role - whether Donny was Islander or Enemy, I can't see town janitoring him regardless of what his alignment is.
what was important was WHAT HE WAS, [His role is important] not whether he was one or the other. [but there's no point in discussing what his role was]