Buzzer fake

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Revision as of 00:06, 10 December 2020 by Kevin Wang (talk | contribs) (cut out attempts to buzzer fake in favor of actual buzzer fakes or related gaffes)
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A buzzer fake is a tactic where one player pretends that he is about to buzz, in the hopes of luring a player on the other team into buzzing early in order to "beat" the faker out, thus inducing a neg.

In theory, a buzzer fake will be far easier for a player with a natural full-body buzz, as he can initiate telltale pre-buzzing movements without actually buzzing. It is also easier with a Judge paddle than with a thumb-plunger. A fake buzz may potentially work in two situations:

  • where a player who actually has a guess is simply waiting for a more concrete clue and then is legitimately lured into a buzz
  • where a player has no idea what the answer might be, but wishes to appear to be buzzing on a question as if he does, thus enhancing his perceived skill rating (which will of course plummet if the fake buzz succeeds). This is known as reflex buzzing.

Risks

There are two primary risks inherent when one attempts a buzzer fake:

  • One's teammates could also potentially be induced to reflex buzz, resulting in a neg (see below)
  • If one is not careful, a buzzer fake can turn into a very real terrible buzz, also resulting in a neg.

History

Buzzer fakes seldom succeed, making confirmed cases rare.