ur way to obsessed with filesize i mean u can have a shiy ton of i ports before ever reaching limit
id understand if it was extreme like 800 kb or somthing but its only 50
It's an attachment. If somebody is using attachments for equipment, they're usually going to need LOTS of imports for all of their items. When there are things of equal or greater quality with significantly less file size, that's going to impact the rating.
I gave it a 4/5. The moderator also gave this a 4/5, and I don't see people flooding the moderator with complaints about his rating.
Quality and file size are both very important. Anyone can make a 2kb model that looks like crap, and anybody can make a 100kb attachment that looks good. The skill is in making something look good compared to its file size. If you make something with a huge file size and expect a 5/5, you'd better make it look more than just good; it would have to look amazing enough to be worth importing with such a size. In this case, the sword doesn't look amazing. It looks good. It's not bad; I don't hate it, I even gave it a 4/5. But I don't think it's worth a 5/5, and my rating is mine to make. Mind your own business.
If I get one more complaint from spoiled brats who can't handle anything lower than a 5/5, I'm going to do absolutely nothing to change my rating, because the more you complain, the more you show how I shouldn't care about what you have to say. After all, you're not respecting my freedom to have my own opinion and rate things what I want to rate them.
You've never made equipment attachments before, so I guess you don't know much about appropriate attachment file sizes, but since an attachment is not a full-size animated unit model, it is not appropriate for it to have a file size comparable to a unit. And in the event of having such a file size, it needs to be impressive enough to justify such file size. There have been plenty of high file size models that I've rated a 5/5, but that is because they were amazing. 5/5 means amazing. It doesn't mean "i kind of like it". If it's not amazing enough to be worth the file size, then it's not getting a 5/5.
Let me explain ratings to you, since you, along with most of the people around here, don't seem to understand.
1/5 means reject. The average person's work is a 1/5, because the majority of people don't have any approved work. That's not a bad thing, it just means that here at hiveworkshop, we have higher standards. Even skilled resource makers have had things rejected at first.
2/5 means acceptable, but still kind of low. This is better than the average person. Most people need a practice before they can even achieve such a rating.
3/5 means the average model on hiveworkshop. Being able to produce 3/5 work makes you much more than the average person, because the average person can't get 3/5's from moderators on their models. If you get a 3/5, you're doing very well, because 3/5 is average acceptable, and it has to be good for that.
4/5 means great. You have to be way better than the average to get a 4/5 when you're competing with other people who are good at what they do. I gave this resource a 4/5, which is a pretty darn good rating.
5/5 means amazing/incredible. Moderators don't give these out very often. Sometimes their awarding of a 5/5 even includes efficient file size as part of their reasoning. Normal users, however, rate almost everything a 5/5. If it's of acceptable quality, they seem to think it automatically deserves a 5/5.
When you throw out 5/5's so easily, they lose their meaning. People start expecting a 5/5, and if they get any lower, they think there's something wrong, because suddenly 5/5 becomes the standard. And when they get a 5/5, it doesn't even mean anything, they don't get the massive sense of accomplishment anymore, because in today's hive,
anything can get a 5/5 user rating.
I gave this a 4/5 because after much consideration, that is what I decided it deserved. If you can't accept that, I don't give a rat's bottom, because it's my rating, not yours.