Nommit
Nommit | |
---|---|
Founded: | November 2016 |
Played on: | A Subreddit |
Current status: | Dead |
Final players: | unknown |
Final ruleset: | link |
Website: | https://www.reddit.com/r/nommit/ |
nommit, also stylized as "/r/nommit" due to it being played on a subreddit, was a Nomic that lasted about five months from the end of November 2016 to the beginning of April 2017.
History
Pre-Gameplay
Before the game even began, there was content already on /r/nommit posted about three years prior. These were a remnant of a previous Nomic that has nothing to do with the version of nommit this page is about.
Initial Ruleset
On November 28, 2016, Reddit user veganzombeh made a post to /r/nommit subreddit outlining an eight-rule ruleset "adapted to work better with reddit's format." This was the first post associated with this Nomic.
veganzombeh's initial ruleset established that all reddit users were players and that all players must abide by the rules in effect, a contradiction that never actually made that much of a difference on the actual gameplay. It also established that all players were eligible voters. It stated that no proposal could have retroactive effect and that lower-numbered rules would take precedence.
Overall, the initial ruleset held some minor issues but, as experience would prove, most of its tenants still held up to the end of the game.
Beginnings
Immediately after the initial ruleset was proposed, a plethora of proposals were submitted, most of which would end up becoming icons of nommit. Since nommit had no proposal numbering system, the proposals are differentiated by what it links to.
- Secretary created the office of Secretary, who would keep track of the ruleset.
- Reduce proposal times caused rule voting to last 48 hours instead of 72.
- Contingent Proposal Process established a system to have some proposals depend on other proposals.
- Rule proposal voting mechanism codified the "Aye" and "Nay" voting standard that players had been unofficially using since the beginning of the game.
- Curtail open proposals established the tags system, where all proposals would be marked with a "[Proposal]" in the title and Tags for clarity required them to also include one of "[Enactment]", "[Amendment]" or "[Repeal]".