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Turning off all toggles is for dead games, so there's not really a risk of it leading to a game dying. It's an alternative to clicking "Leave Game," which kills a game much faster than this would. This is a way to save access to games that are no longer active, to keep for reference/nostalgia, but avoid it cluttering your page.
If a game is inactive, you don't need to turn off notifications. You won't get any.
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Another use case is if your story in the game finishes, but the rests of the players continue playing another story arc, you might not want the notifications and clutter for that game but still want to keep access.
This seems like an edge case but I understand this use.
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Otherwise, I don't see why anyone would turn off ALL toggles in an active game
except by accident.Exactly my point.
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I think it's an easy accident to fix because of @ mentions and Messages, but maybe we should also include a warning message, if all toggles are turned OFF a pop-up explains you'll lose access to the game from everywhere on the site except this "My Games" page. That might help avoid that accident from happening.
I'd appreciate at least a warning message or ask for confirmation. That should seriously mitigate the risk of accident. So good idea.
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I don't see the point of this if they just come back when there is a new post. If there is no new post then they will vanish from the 'Latest Posts' anyway. But coming back should be a user choice.
This was about the front page, not the latest posts site.
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When the only other option is to remove oneself from the game to get it off the list, this seems like the lesser of two evils and less likely to lead to game-death.
Except that if you accidentally removed yourself from the game, people can see that and react. If you accidentally muted the game, people will only see that you don't post anymore and will have no idea whether you lost interest or what. Also, I've never seen anyone accidentally leave a game but I have seen people accidentally mess up permissions and settings.
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That does already mean they were not interested in that game, else they would notice there was no activity and see that they had muted it.
If you're in a lot of games, one not updating in a while might slip your notice. It has happened to me if I accidentally marked a thread as read (much less likely to happen now that I can mark them as unread after opening) or if a post somehow scrolled to page two of notifications without me noticing.
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Some people don't use emails for updates, some people might not want to get updates on the Front Page. It should be up to them.
I feel like there's a big difference between your email feed which you use for plenty of things being spammed by fifty emails a day and a symbol being marked in red on the page you use just for gaming anyway.
But I'm not worried about someone who never checks their front page for updates turning off notifications there. I'm worried about someone who exclusively checks their frontpage accidentally doing that and not noticing.
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What if someone has absolutely no interest in Boardgames, but keep getting posts about them in their front page? Or if they don't care for the AMAs, or the developement?
Denying them the ability to say what appears on the front page means they will just stop looking at it.
I see that point and if those threads were more active than they are, I might consider it an issue. But boardgames receives a post maybe once every two months or so, for example.
And I would argue not everything should be able to be turned off. AMAs? Lots of people say the strength of GP is its community. Even if you don't want to participate, I think it's good to see that community activity happen. (Might be nice to have a mark as read option that doesn't require you to go into the thread for this, though)
Development? We already get plenty of complaints about updates happening without proper warning. Better not make it even easier to not see development happen.
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That sounds like a problem to me. If 'plenty of people would like a thing', maybe we should reasses these conflicting 'goals of the site'.
If plenty of people wanted GP to be an anime fansite, should we restructure the site to turn it into that? As I mentioned before, the focus of GP is that it's a community-driven site. That's the identity that people advertise it with and like it for. Just because an undefined "plenty of people" would like a feature, doesn't mean it needs to be implemented (even if it would be good on its own) if that implementation could hurt the site as a whole by shifting its focus.
Anyway, I've laid all of my concerns out plenty of times before but most people in this thread at least seem to like these suggestions. I don't. But if they happen, they happen and that's fine. I don't think they'll ruin the site. I just don't think they're necessarily improvements.