Can watching (or not watching) games impact the result?

Nogatco Rd

Pierre-Luc Dubas
Apr 3, 2021
3,477
6,439
This guy almost got the SWAT team called on him for watching a Lightning playoff game a few years ago.

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Not hard to imagine how that interaction could have gone poorly for the young man, which certainly would have cast a pall over the rest of the series for TBL. thereby possibly affecting the outcome.
 

NotAVacuumSalesman

The Guide And Record Book™
Jun 19, 2017
4,293
7,789
I'm one of those people who moves locations around the house between periods if they are losing and won't move if they are winning.

It's stupid as hell but I still do it.
So for example, your team goes up a goal and you decided to take a bathroom break at the intermission. Do you occupy the bathroom for the duration of the game?
 

The Cannon of Tesoma

Registered User
Jan 5, 2016
5,235
3,787
Finland
Following holographic principle any phenomenon and/or structure and/or process existing in X dimensional space manifold is fully encoded to the surface of that space with dimension count X-1.

HFBoards is 2D phenomenon on a screen, but it encodes 3D on ice hockey phenomenon perfectly.

Q.E.D. :huh:
 

wetcoast

Registered User
Nov 20, 2018
25,049
11,843
I mean, imagine your team is losing at the start of the 3rd, and you think about, should you start (or stop) watching the game.

As far as I understand, worlds where you watching and not watching the game are different. But are they different enough to impact the game and change the result?
Are you sharing because it sounds like you have some mind blowing stuff right now.

The Observer Effect would suggest that the act of observing a phenomenon changes how it behaves.

So, technically, yes.
OP didn't indicate live viewing and most people here are taking it as a broadcast viewer right?
 

SEALBound

Fancy Gina Carano
Sponsor
Jun 13, 2010
43,168
22,118
Chaos theory and the butterfly effect. Watching or not watching on TV, the convergence rate is so minimal that, no, it would not have an impact.
 

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