Difference between revisions of "Math Velazquez"

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(expanded mathematical ambitions)
(Math doesn't use pronouns because Math is Math)
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{{Player|team=[[Houston Spies]]|status=Presumed alive, starless, mathematical; further updates available [[Special:MathStatus|here]]|image1=File:Math_velazquez.jpg}}Math Velazquez became one of the first non-human entities to play blaseball when they began their career pitching for the [[Houston Spies]] in [[season 1]]. Unconfirmed accounts suggest Math may have previously been a human who became a purely mathematical entity by unknown means. Math disputes these claims, and insist that they have always existed in their current form.
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{{Player|team=[[Houston Spies]]|status=Presumed alive, starless, mathematical; further updates available [[Special:MathStatus|here]]|image1=File:Math_velazquez.jpg|pronouns=N/A}}Math Velazquez became one of the first non-human entities to play blaseball when Math began career pitching for the [[Houston Spies]] in [[season 1]]. Unconfirmed accounts suggest Math may have previously been a human who became a purely mathematical entity by unknown means. Math disputes these claims, and insists that Math has always simply been Math.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
== Stars ==
 
== Stars ==
As of Season 2, Math Velazquez is one of 3 players in the League to have a 0 star rating, with the others being [[Lars Taylor]] of the [[Hellmouth Sunbeams]] and [[Chambers Simmons]] of the [[Boston Flowers]]. They are all pitchers. Math Velazquez is known to have consulted with several eminent mathematicians in the hopes of developing an experimental algorithm which would allow them to become the first blaseball player with a negative star rating. It is unknown how they intend to achieve this, why they consider this outcome desirable, and what impact it would have on blaseball as a whole.
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As of Season 2, Math Velazquez is one of 3 players in the League to have a 0 star rating, with the others being [[Lars Taylor]] of the [[Hellmouth Sunbeams]] and [[Chambers Simmons]] of the [[Boston Flowers]]. All three are pitchers. Math Velazquez is known to have consulted with several eminent mathematicians in the hopes of developing an experimental algorithm which would allow Math to become the first blaseball player with a negative star rating. It is unknown how Math intends to achieve this, why Math considers this outcome desirable, and what impact it would have on blaseball as a whole.
  
Velazquez has theorised that achieving negative values is a first step towards opening blaseball up to ever more esoteric branches of mathematics - irrational numbers, complex numbers, and perhaps even beyond that into geometry, algebra, lattices. Again, it is unknown why they consider this outcome desirable, and opposing scholars have warned that success in this project could critically destabilise blaseball.
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Math has theorised that achieving negative values is a first step towards opening blaseball up to ever more esoteric branches of mathematics - irrational numbers, complex numbers, and perhaps even beyond that into geometry, algebra, lattices. Again, it is unknown why Math considers this outcome desirable, and opposing scholars have warned that success in this project could critically destabilise blaseball.
 
[[Category:Players]]
 
[[Category:Players]]
 
[[Category:Starless Players]]
 
[[Category:Starless Players]]

Revision as of 16:33, 3 August 2020

Math Velazquez became one of the first non-human entities to play blaseball when Math began career pitching for the Houston Spies in season 1. Unconfirmed accounts suggest Math may have previously been a human who became a purely mathematical entity by unknown means. Math disputes these claims, and insists that Math has always simply been Math.

Stars

As of Season 2, Math Velazquez is one of 3 players in the League to have a 0 star rating, with the others being Lars Taylor of the Hellmouth Sunbeams and Chambers Simmons of the Boston Flowers. All three are pitchers. Math Velazquez is known to have consulted with several eminent mathematicians in the hopes of developing an experimental algorithm which would allow Math to become the first blaseball player with a negative star rating. It is unknown how Math intends to achieve this, why Math considers this outcome desirable, and what impact it would have on blaseball as a whole.

Math has theorised that achieving negative values is a first step towards opening blaseball up to ever more esoteric branches of mathematics - irrational numbers, complex numbers, and perhaps even beyond that into geometry, algebra, lattices. Again, it is unknown why Math considers this outcome desirable, and opposing scholars have warned that success in this project could critically destabilise blaseball.