I propose a new Gold level Sportsmanship badge. I earned the silver badge June 4th, and I continue to vote for competing answers. I would like to feel that I am working toward something, not because I would otherwise cease to vote for these answers, which clearly I have not, but because it adds to the fun of the site, just like the other badges.

Following the ratios of some other badges, since the silver is at 100, perhaps 400 votes for competing answers is a good level?


When I asked this question I was unaware that all votes for competing answer were counted, believing it was limited to the number of questions. Since in fact all votes are counted I think the threshold needs to be higher, perhaps 1000 votes as suggested by user unknown.

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Yes, but what would you call it? Super-Duper Sportsmanship? :-) – LarsTech Dec 21 '11 at 16:05
@LarsTech I have not given that consideration. I suppose "Gold Sportsmanship" would be redundant, but not exactly confusing. One could also go for something like "Enduring Sportsmanship" but that appears to speak more of time than volume, which doesn't match my proposal. – Mr.Wizard Dec 21 '11 at 16:08
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Would the Lady Byng badge be too obscure a reference? – Bill the Lizard Dec 21 '11 at 16:13
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@Bill I don't know. I had to follow the link to learn the meaning, but I hope that most on this site are not opposed to learning. It would feel funny for some reason to have Lady something on my profile. :^) – Mr.Wizard Dec 21 '11 at 16:15
@Mr.Wizard It was worth a shot. A lot of hockey fans would have to follow the link too. :) – Bill the Lizard Dec 21 '11 at 16:17
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@BilltheLizard: +1 Exactly what I was going to suggest. – Dennis Dec 21 '11 at 16:44
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How about Olympian as a badge name? – JNK Dec 21 '11 at 17:54
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Having Olympian as a badge name is likely to get you yelled at by the IOC. – CanSpice Dec 21 '11 at 18:13
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As a word that is hundreds of years old, I don't think the IOC can lay claim to Olympian. However, I don't know that it conveys the correct meaning that well. I tend to think of "god-like" in some aspect or another when I read "Olympian" outside the realm of the games. – jball Dec 21 '11 at 19:09
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Do not want. But if we get this, can we also get a Gold "PHD" badge for downvoting competing answers. – user414076 Dec 21 '11 at 19:17
Any particular reason you don't like this, @AnthonyPegram ? I mean, apart from the obvious fallout of friendly upvoting destroying all of stackexchange. – jball Dec 21 '11 at 19:26
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@jball, I might be alone, but we don't need badges for everything, and behavior-encouraging badges should ultimately benefit the site in terms of adding useful content, generating views, etc. A silver badge for a benevolent yet ultimately lesser activity such as this is sufficient, in my view. – user414076 Dec 21 '11 at 19:31
I suggest the levels be at par with other badges (e.g. 100 and 500). For reference: S&W/CopyEditor: 80/500 Deputy/Marshal: 80/500 Electorate: 600 – Lorem Ipsum May 24 '12 at 1:56
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Say this is implemented. What happens after you earn this badge? Will you want a new level of platinum badges to be created to further "add to the fun"? Where does it end? I don't see any benefit to the community from this, and it would further clutter up an already-noisy badge page. – Popular Demand May 24 '12 at 2:41
@jball this is getting off topic, but history has shown that not having total dominion over the word "Olympian" doesn't stop the IOC from yelling. – Popular Demand May 24 '12 at 2:45

10 Answers

First of all, I second the request.

As for the name:

Since upvoting a tremendous amount of competing answers implies that the user actually cares about the question getting answered instead of just wanting to "score" himself, I suggest Team player.

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himself is politically incorrect! – bestsss Dec 22 '11 at 0:51
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@bestsss: So am I. – Dennis Dec 22 '11 at 0:55
you mean 'team player' or politically incorrect (if the latter, it's very politically incorrect to say so, mind you) – bestsss Dec 22 '11 at 1:04
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@bestsss: Talking about a generic user (not one in particular) is gender neutral and perfectly good English. The context makes clear that it does not necessarily refer to a male user. – Dennis Dec 22 '11 at 1:09
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+1 for Team player – Curt Apr 3 '12 at 9:53

I like Corinthian spirit, but I think this is very much a British English-only phrase.

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+1 for a British English phrase---definitely a feature, not a bug. :-D – Chris Jester-Young Dec 27 '11 at 18:52
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I'd never heard the phrase before reading this, but that gives it an air of mystery that suits a gold badge. – senderle Jun 19 '12 at 2:30

I like it!!

How about "Not a rep Monster"?

Or, "Not A Rep Whore"

I wanted to design a badge for it but got bored and completely redesigned the gold badges.

enter image description here

(Note that the 1000 is random, I prefer 400/500)

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Before anyone says "not enough jquery": I used jQuery+contentEditable to do this. – Manishearth Apr 3 '12 at 8:32
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Nice. Now how does this add constructively to the conversation? I'm hoping to see this actually implemented. You're playing with JQuery. – Tim Post Apr 3 '12 at 19:12
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This would have been perfect two days ago... – Mr.Wizard Apr 3 '12 at 22:06
@TimPost: Well, I wanted to design a badge-image for it, just 'cos badges look cool. And then I got a little carried away--the relevant badge is still there, just with a whole lot of other stuff. :/ – Manishearth Apr 4 '12 at 4:49
So the "constructive" part is the badge name and image, The rest is noise, I guess. Didn't want my jQuery to go to waste ;) – Manishearth Apr 4 '12 at 4:50
Well, jQuery is never wrong. Who knows what could happen? :P – Tim Post Apr 4 '12 at 8:41
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"Self explanatory"? No, you've got some 'splaining to do. – gnostradamus May 17 '12 at 17:52

I'd call the badge "Spirit". The spirit of the site is to get all good content up to the top where it can be as useful as possible.

If you consistently up vote based on merit alone, even if it means another answer scores higher than your own, then you have the spirit of the site at heart.

And yes, I think that does deserve a gold badge. By the time someone reached ~400 - 500 votes, it means we're just rewarding someone again for consistent, desirable behavior. That's precisely what badges should be doing.

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Thanks for your support. Do you specifically favor "Spirit" over "Corinthian Spirit" (my favorite suggestion)? – Mr.Wizard Apr 3 '12 at 22:04
I think either would be quite nice. I do favor "Spirit" but I'm at a bit of a loss to articulate why. I think I'd be at the same loss to explain why I like one color over another. In any event, I really hope to see it implemented. The idea sounds great to me, I hope the hardest part is deciding on the name :) – Tim Post Apr 3 '12 at 22:14

In the spirit of terms like "Fair play", the ideas of ethics and friendly competition embodied in "Sportsmanship", and just plain fun, I propose that the badge be called Good Game.

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I was of the impression that good game has lost its original meaning in some circles and could carry with it a shade of sarcasm. – prusswan Dec 29 '11 at 3:19
It depends on the context and the tone used. Just like "great" can be used for "really good" and "not good at all". I think attaching the term to a gold badge would make the intention clear, but it could be a little muddy. – jball Dec 29 '11 at 7:10

I quite like "Gentlemanly Conduct" as a name - again possibly a little British, but my other suggestion, "Jolly Good Show!", might have been a little over the top.

Gentlemanly Conduct does capture the spirit of fair play and sportsmanship in a nice phrase.

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Is there a more sex agnostic code of conduct? Maybe "Chivalry" would be the way to go? – Tim Post Apr 3 '12 at 19:14
Chivalry is a nice way of putting it. Not as much fun, but gets the message over. – Jon Egerton Apr 4 '12 at 8:37

I second the request, but would suggest a higher threshold, like 1000 votes.

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I vote for it to be called Esprit de Corps :-)

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I really do like the incentive to vote for competing answers,

but maybe this badge is a little bit more easy to grind at than a gold badge ought to be.


There's also the room people to avoid the incentive by up-voting on questions that are weeks or months old(thus not putting their own answer in jeopardy). You might want to put some sort of time-limit on this, or only count votes that occur before the OP has accepted an answer.

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That's probably over-thinking it a bit. Assuming we want a gold badge for this, where's the harm in older answers getting votes? – Anna Lear Mar 26 at 19:56
@AnnaLear Well, for one, badge grinders are going to go down their list of answers, and indiscriminately up-vote every other answer in those questions, regardless whether they're good answers or not. – Sam I am Mar 26 at 19:57
Sam, since a Gold badge should be fairly hard to get I'm not opposed to your proposed time restriction, but if such a restriction would result in this badge not being implemented due to the additional hassle I'd rather see the badge implemented anyway, without it. – Mr.Wizard Mar 26 at 20:06
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Another possible restriction would be that your own answers each have to have a minimum score, so you cannot simply post a pile of marginal answers and upvote everything else. What do you think of that? – Mr.Wizard Mar 26 at 20:07
@Mr.Wizard Well, if the restriction was on the answers you've upvoted, rather than the answers you've posted, that would solve the grinding issue – Sam I am Mar 26 at 20:09
@Mr.Wizard The badge description is "Up voted 100 answers on questions where an answer of yours has a positive score" posting an answer with a positive score might not be difficult, but it's difficult enough that you can't just repeat it on demand. – Sam I am Mar 26 at 21:59
@Mr.Wizard I think the confusion comes from your own idea having already been implemented – Sam I am Mar 27 at 14:29

What about "Olympic Spirit"?

those should be five free hand circles

Inspired by the answers from AakashM and Tim Post.

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Maybe it should be a medal instead of a badge. – Marijn Aug 8 '12 at 9:00

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