Thread:Emptylord/@comment-4881935-20150722052058/@comment-4881935-20150724162753

Willbachbakal wrote: Considering I moved those radii and degrees to the range sections in the first place, yes I do. You are being willfully ignorant here, and excessively stubborn on a point that is not even relevant to the main topic of discussion.

Ah wait, that's what you mean by 'range' section. Haha. You guys should be doing something else for radius since Radius =/= range. It's both misleading and more effort to distinguish for a reader. If you guys are doing that, why not just have a 'radius' section? Simpler and more direct.

You are also making no point at all by mentioning the template. If anything, it would prove my point, as that is a clear example of a bolded term used to denote a portion of an ability's description, and therefore add clarity. Bolding champion names achieves the same thing to a finer degree within paragraphs. "Bolded term used to denote a portion of an ability description" <-- even though the bold words serves almost zero assistance in explaining what the topic of the portion. It also adds confusion as 'once again', your putting emphasis on a word that isn't vital for the sentence or the key aspect of the sentence.

The bold word is 'attempting' to achieve something in a inefficient manner while separate paragraphs and punctuation marks essentially serves the same purpose without the excess implication of 'implying that the name is important, not the other words' attached to bolding.

Petulant use of formatting aside, bolding our names does make your reply slightly more readable, though the main impediment to the clarity of your post remains your grasp of the English language. Once again, you have brought your personal vendetta to a discussion that is beyond our individual squabbles, and are poisoning an otherwise valuable conversation.

Personal vendetta? Are you joking me? I haven't directed any harmful words to you or intentions. Or were you just offended of your so call 'petulant' formatting with your name, as I was only using that formatting to illustrate my point. And it does illustrate that you're just using the bold word in a completely different manner.