1. If I had avoided a player, that means I don't want to play with them. If I join a game where 5 people on the other team and 2 on my are avoided by me, that means I DO NOT WANT TO BE IN A GAME WITH THEM. MNC is the only game I have played where the avoid feature does not work period. 2. If I leave a game for whatever reason, I don't want to be thrown back into said game 5-6 times before I get into another game. This goes back to issue 1, I usually pick someone at random to avoid to ensure I don't get that game, doesn't work I still get put into that game. I've avoided a whole team before(All low-level assassins) but still got thrown back into that game.
says the guy who doesnt understand punctuation. that being said, i think the fan base, is slightly smaller than halo/cod, and therefore may only have a couple open matches that you can join at a particular time; in which case, the game would rather put you in their game instead of not put you in one at all.
1: It can take some time to get the players you sent bad rep avoided, but it usually won't take more than 12 hours. 2: Luck of the draw. I've had the same thing occur in other games. Would you believe that people are actually douche-y enough in Left 4 Dead to have one guy run out with nothing but a single pistol, hurt him until he can't move at full speed, have him leave, and then votekick anyone who joins? Imagine hitting quick match and rejoining that team four times in a row.
1. I'm still getting thrown into games with people I avoided a few weeks ago. 2. Maybe but I really don't believe in luck.
1: Avoiding a player doesn't actually mean you'll never encounter them again. It(XBL) just tries to minimize the chances of you bumping into them. If the only open game of MNC you can connect to has ten players you've avoided, one you haven't given feedback, and one open slot, you're going to join a game with ten players you've avoided. 2: Depends entirely on your definition of "luck." I prefer "happenstance" or "serendipity" but there's nothing mystical about it. A flock of birds can fly overhead and one could randomly take a dump that lands perfectly on your face the exact second you look up to see them, a bullet fired from a mile away could come down at some random angle and remove a few of your eyelashes without harming you, or the only joinable session of a game you want to play may be full of people you don't want to play with. By my definition that's definitely luck.