Note: This question was inspired by a hat but it's actually about your experience interacting with the site in pursuit of a hat.
During Winter Bash 2014, I spent a lot of time thinking about hats. In particular, I gave a lot of thought to the Red Baron. For reference, the requirement to earn this hat was:
answer +5 a -3 question that goes to +3
According to the Winter Bash wrap-up blog post, only 26 users earned the Red Baron across the entire network, making it quite a difficult reward to achieve. This had already become clear toward the end of the event, as the Leaderboard began to fill up with aspiring Cubbinses, and it got me thinking: as the most difficult hat to earn, does the Red Baron represent an exceptionally high standard for contributions to the site? So I wanted to ask directly of those users who actively tried to earn the Red Baron: Do you feel that your attempts to earn this hat made you a better user on Stack Overflow? Do you feel that you went above and beyond in order to curate an unappreciated or misunderstood question?
Or, do you feel like you polished a turd? If you looked for questions at -2 or -3 to answer, did you find them all to be uninteresting, unhelpful or otherwise not worth answering? If so, did you answer them anyway, and try your best to polish and promote them, to turn them around?
There's always talk about whether some rewards encourage bad behavior (e.g., The Sumo Judge hat is disruptive). Actively pursing the Naruto hat late in this season's Bash left a bit of a bad taste in my mouth; I didn't even take a shot at Selfie because I didn't feel I had anything important to share, though I've had success with self-answers a few times in the past.
If you didn't attempt to earn the Red Baron, or if you tried, but without any particular strategy, or if you just didn't give much thought to the requirements themselves, here's the question I chose as a likely candidate for earning the hat myself. the first revision was not very good but the author was responding to comments and trying to address them with edits; the basic level of OP investment required to turn the question around was there. Thanks to the particular experiences I've had, I felt able to see the diamond in the rough—the interesting, useful question hidden inside a somewhat broad and unclear problem statement. So here's what I did:
- I wrote up a detailed answer, aimed at the question I thought the author was trying to express.
- I left a comment on the question (now deleted) asking for OP's feedback on whether I had correctly interpreted their question.
- After OP accepted my answer and commented that it was useful, I suggested an edit that aggressively reworked the question but focused more on clarity, directness and title/tags than actual content.
- After OP indicated again that I was on the right track, I put together a sample schema with example data that seemed to fit the question. I ran this content by the OP again before doing anything with it.
- With OP's approval, I suggested another edit to incorporate the example I had created into the question. This was an even more aggressive edit than the first; I was replacing much of the OP's words and content, so I took pains to make my edit summary clear and detailed.
After all this, I put a 200-rep bounty on the question to try to give it a "second first impression" (and hopefully, to earn myself a hat). In the end, the question remains a little too broad and not quite clear enough to be top-notch, but I think I've taken it as far as I can as a third-party editor. I think it's unarguably a better question than it was but I still wonder: Is this type of aggressive revision something we should aspire to accomplish—like earning a rare Winter Bash hat? Or did I go too far?