You've totally and utterly missed my point that this site isn't a game to win
Yet it has all the trappings of a game:
- Leaderboard
- Challenges, with demonstrated progress towards a goal
- The word "clinched", with its connotation of "goal met", featured prominently on every page with a map and many without
All it's missing are daily prizes and a way to earn extra lives!
and that, even if it was a game, 100%ing usai is not just winning, but the gold-plated epic challenge win that's equivalent of completing all the achievements
Maybe, maybe not. Undoubtedly it's a goal for many users, but equivalent of completing all? The fact that Oscar's still driving years after completing (at the time) usai shows that the other achievements are just as compelling.
Living in (or near? hard to say now) Europe, you may not realize there are people with the means to travel extensively
I'm very aware of that, being someone without the means to travel extensively - I've added only a couple of hundred miles to my travels since the site relaunched (obviously more has been mapped as systems have been added) and only a few 'long' trips (at least wrt clinching) that have all been only a day long (I've under 10 days more than 100 miles from home in the last decade).
Those without the means to travel extensively, are clearly not people who will consider travelling to 49 states + DC and driving 45,000 miles plus as doable. It doesn't matter to them whether or not there's not the added difficulty of trips to Alaska and Puerto Rico, because not only is Hawaii something just as excluding, but the dozen or more cross-continental road trips are too!
It seems you may have misunderstood me. My comment was that there are people *with* the means to travel all over the States, but who find language barriers to be enough of a deterrent. Including Puerto Rico is a barrier to their completion. Of course we're only having this discussion because signs with PR1, PR2, and PR3 on them are fantasy; should the DTOP choose to post them, there's no arguing anymore. They're in.
And, lets say someone has travelled so extensively over the lower-48 and Hawaii that they have clinched all the signed interstates. Surely they have both the time, money, and sense of adventure, to make trips to Alaska and Puerto Rico should they wish to do so in order to get that 100% bragging rights?
You greatly underestimate the allure of xenophobia in this country, as well as the ease with which such an attitude may be maintained. I have taught these people. Upon my return from a trip to Mexico, I was showing slides and talking excitedly about my adventures, and one student who I knew to be well-travelled was clearly interested and asked many thoughtful questions. I began making suggestions for when he crossed the border for himself, and he stopped me. Not going to happen; he only travels in THIS country. He hasn't even visited Ontario, less than three hours from his home! Can't expect someone like that to give PR a second thought.
So what you are saying is that the "flagship epic challenge" shouldn't challenge those, whom you feel sad for because they don't step out of their comfort zone and travel to places like PR, to step out of their comfort zone and travel to PR? What a weird argument.
No, that's not the core of my argument at all. My argument is that we shouldn't *arbitrarily* increase the difficulty of that particular challenge while using a different set of rules for all other challenges in North America. It's inconsistent, and, in light of the "flagship epic" nature of the interstate challenge, unfair.
Which brings us back to the words of SSOWorld in the first reply to this topic:
Remove unsigned Interstates or add unsigned routes of all other systems. The choice is yours.
That's as concise as anyone can make this argument. And I think plenty of evidence has been presented above to show that adding the unsigned routes of all other North American systems would be madness. And it would need to be ALL of the systems unless we want to revive this debate again and again.