User blog:Transentience/A Hypothesis to the Top Even Ranking Holders

It has come to my attention that it is common to see the same names over and over within leaderboards of events. It has led me to the hypothesis I am about to explain. It is extremely likely that I am not the first one to notice this anomaly but bear with me as I explain how I see it.

Resources
In a normal event, it is usually expected that those who have amassed a large amount of cars that are highly upgraded ( MAX'd or PRO'd, both is what I would anticipate ) as well as credits and lots of time on their hands are the ones that will remain in the top of the leaderboards and therefore, reap more of the rewards which they might then use to apply to other events and win even more, creating a sort of positive feedback loop. However, most individual will not spend some 24-72+ hours constantly competing in order to ensure that their time is at the top of the leaderboards. Hence comes my hypothesis of "Pooling"

Pooling
Let us imagine, for a moment, an individual who has already amassed a large amount of cars and credits but lacks the time to compete in events. Or, It could simply be an individual who has a large group of friends. This person might create a new Google account which will then be connected to his/her Asphalt 8 inventory. He/she will share the login details of the account to others ( possibly friends) who are under some form of agreement that they get to use the account as long as the lender gains some form of benefit ( maybe in rewards from events, profit, upgrades, etc. ). Therefore, the individual has created a pool of members or team that is constantly competing to: This can be taken a step further if the members of the pool are specifically chosen for the time zones the are in. Perhaps a +2-4 hour difference between each member will allow other members to rest or do other tasks while one continually racks up credits and amasses moure resouces.
 * Get Better Times
 * Obtain more resources
 * Constantly push the lenders account to the top of the leaderboard

In a sense, it almost creates a "rich gets richer" scenario.

To sum things up:


 * 1) An individual with a large amount of resources finds other people willing to use those resources to gain more resources


 * 1) The owner of the account makes sure that all members cooperate and join under a set of conditions


 * 1) The members then proceed to race and amass resources which are shared by the users of the account


 * 1) These resources and the time of the members is then diverted to events which gives them a major advantage