Had an interesting game last night:
My opponent put a list on the table that had me genuinely worried. It was going to be a nasty game, and it would be a struggle to pull out a win.
Well I did win, and at every turn, every combat phase, every asteroid, the only thing my opponent did wrong was roll bad dice, instead of rolling perfect dice like I did.
It never had to do with him bumping, or leaving a ship in multiple arcs. It never had to do with poor action choices or a flawed strategy. The dice, and dice alone were responsible for his losing that game. Or at least that was the mentality I saw.
Can the dice be fickle?Sure, but when you place the blame solely on your dice, you never get better as a player. You never look for the flaws in your actions, the holes in your plan, the weaknesses of your build, etc.
Do improbable rolls happen - absolutely. But if...
Your roll was unmodified
You bumped
You were stressed
You're in multiple firing arcs
Your opponent has tokens
...then there were better options available to you that you didn't make use of at some point during the game. Look back a few turns - was there a spot where a barrel roll was the better choice? Or a straight 3 instead of a soft 3? Would the hull upgrade have better better than the Stealth Device, or spreading points more evenly across ships, etc?
All these things go into a game, and if you sit back and blame the dice, you'll never see the myriad of places where you can improve.
Plus, you just sound like a sore loser - because blaming the dice takes the credit away from your opponent's ability to out play you.