I knew you would try to play semantics with me. You're taking one piece of info out of context from the rest of the post. It seems everyone else can read between the lines.
And the coffee example? Now you're just trying to argue for the sake of arguing. I'm sure you are fully aware of the point I'm making. And if you happen to take a gulp of coffee, well, you're gonna burn the shit out of your mouth. So yeah, I suppose you do have to improve on coffee sipping. You aren't a masterful drinker the second you are born and if you ever want to drink coffee, you have to get better at taking smaller sips.
That wasn't meant to be a real argument, hence the parenthesis, but you can go ahead and argue with it anyway... but seriously I have no idea what your point is with this bit, so I'm going to ignore it. Thanks for the random ad hominem in the middle though, I really want to have a discussion with someone who would add in a sentence about me having shit in my mouth right in the middle of their argument.
You like to play yugioh. That's fine with me. You're goal is to make gimmicky decks. That's cool too. Yet you still do have a plan to make some kind of cohesive deck. I doubt you have ever went to a tournament with a deck that had no mana and was all different colors (or whatever the yugioh equivalent is) and then proceeded to walk away the second your opponent dropped a creature. You'd be entering the tournament with the mindset that you are going to lose before you ever gave yourself a chance. The victim mentality produces no positive outcomes.
See, you assumed something when you said that I "went to a tournament."
I didn't go to a tournament with a gimmicky deck. I've entered a yugioh tournament with a gimmicky deck like maybe once or twice in my entire life, but I've been playing yugioh off and on for about 5 years. Because tournaments are for people who care about winning. When I don't care about winning, they don't want me to enter their tournament, and frankly I don't want to enter it either because unless I get ridiculously lucky, they'll have a nearly impossible to defeat field withing 3-4 turns max.
I played with people from my forum. We would play with custom rules where you can't play using tier 1 cards, weird alternative rules, etc. Basically, if I wanted to play in a competitive environment I would bring competitive cards and play seriously, and vice versa for a casual environment. I didn't run into nationals with an objectively bad deck, because that's stupid.
Anyway, aside from the tournament bit... yes, my goal is to make a deck that is optimal for the strategy it's attempting. But that's the same for
literally everything. I'm not going to actively try to make something worse for what it is. When casual players play skullgirls, do they say "okay, my strategy is to only use the kick buttons!" no, they actually try. Does that mean that they're playing it to get better? No, they're just playing it to have fun. And that's no less valid than someone spending hours in training mode perfecting combos, or someone who just plays through the story because they enjoy the lore, etc.
Basically, though, read this:
http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/PlayerArchetypes
Look at all those mind sets you can come into the game with that aren't about getting better at the game. And yes, all of them apply to SG:
Timmy is the elusive "casual player" I've been talking about.
Johnny is the lab rat.
Spike is obvious.
Vorthos is obvious.
Melvin isn't really his own archetype, but he's the person who's more interested in seeing how big band will play than his story mode/finished art/voice acting.
But the point is, 2/4 of the archetypes actually care about getting better.
I'm sorry if my post was misconstrued, but don't get mad at me when I am puzzled that someone would enjoy playing tournament yugioh or online skullgirls without ever learning how to play a creature or learning how to block properly.
Did you even read the second half of my last post?
I'm done with this stupid shit. Have fun with the last word. Make it count.
How very generous of you.