Difference between revisions of "Shame"

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A Grand Shame is announced when any four teams are shamed on the same day, for example, on Day 96 of Season 2.
 
A Grand Shame is announced when any four teams are shamed on the same day, for example, on Day 96 of Season 2.
  
On Day 6 of Season 3, the [[Chicago Firefighters]], the [[Breckenridge Jazz Hands|Breckenridge Jazz Hand]], the [[Hades Tigers]], and the [[Boston Flowers]] were all shamed by their respective opponents, marking the second Grand Shame in the history of Blaseball.  
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On Day 6 of Season 3, the [[Chicago Firefighters]], the [[Breckenridge Jazz Hands|Breckenridge Jazz Hand]], the [[Hades Tigers]], and the [[Boston Flowers]] were all shamed by their respective opponents, marking the third Grand Shame in the history of Blaseball.  
 
[[Category:Rules]]
 
[[Category:Rules]]
 
[[Category:Shame]]
 
[[Category:Shame]]

Revision as of 00:50, 4 August 2020

The Shame Phase is a game play condition described by Rule 4.i in The Book. The Book states:

i. Shame Phase: If the home team scores the winning run in the bottom of the final inning, the away team must complete the game in shame, despite being mathematically eliminated.

In practice, this means that any away team must record the proper amount of outs in its final inning, no matter how many runs the home team scores. Many league fans have taken to yelling "SHAME" during the entirety of a game's Shame Phase as a means of humiliating the losing away team.


Decrees involving Shame

Enhanced Shame

In The Discipline Era, the decree Enhanced Shame was available in the Election.

Rule Change: When a team is Shamed, they will be punished in the following game. Their next opponent will start with runs equal to the number of runs scored in the Shame period.

Grand Shame

A Grand Shame is announced when any four teams are shamed on the same day, for example, on Day 96 of Season 2.

On Day 6 of Season 3, the Chicago Firefighters, the Breckenridge Jazz Hand, the Hades Tigers, and the Boston Flowers were all shamed by their respective opponents, marking the third Grand Shame in the history of Blaseball.