Guys... please.

You can dislike it all you want and I even am for rerelease, but let's please actually be genuine and stop the degrading of people's achievements and why people put value in their respectively earned rewards.

Being in the top 100 in feast is by no margin equal or similar to being an olympic winner, but Feast most definitely had:

- a measurable difference in skill
- a measuring point to define who was the best at that point (i.e. season)

Genuine players put in genuine effort to be good enough to qualify for it at the time. You are free to call it a dead gamemode now, but at the time it very much was an active competition and generally better looking rewards drove fiercer competition. I'd kindly ask to let people who actually were actively present in those days be the judge of Feast being a "massive grind" as some say or fundamentally a competition.

If you want to make the argument of cheating and wintrading, yes it is a shame they exist, however while the fault ultimately lies with CBU3's carelessness in the western PvP scene, it is fundamentally not fair to devalue the achievement of genuine players because of bad apples existing.

Even in physical sports cheating and wintrading exists, but the difference is much fiercer control and measures. This does not mean that your favourite team or athlete should have their achievement devalued because of people being paranoid of the existence of cheaters.

Also let's not get heated brcause people use olympics as a metaphor or analogy. Bit unfair how much you guys tear into Justitia for making a comparison of an IRL system with a physical troohy tied to it.

To sum it up - please refrain from trying to argue how little a physical/obtainable and unique reward is supposed to matter to a person. Forgive me for saying this, but this just invokes the idea of jealousy if you argue that way. I have serious doubts we get anywhere close to a potential rerelease if we devalue people's achievements, effort and time investment, regardless of how unfair we may find the inherent limitation.