There's a difference, though, between "The exact same award" and "A completely different award as a sort of 'thanks for coming.'"
When I was younger, I was in a youth soccer league. Everyone got a trophy, but most teams got "participant" trophies. The #1 team got a "league winner" trophy, and the #2 got a "Runner-up" trophy.
We didn't have any illusions that "Participant" meant the exact same thing as "Winner."
Despite that, all the kids totally knew that a participant trophy didn't mean you won something. It was just a nice reminder of your time at the league. I kept all the trophies I got (most of them were winner, one was a runner-up, and one was participant) and I liked all of them.
If your costume got a "Winner" and the person in a cat-girl outfit got a "Least dressed," I don't think that that would be the example of "Exact same award."
I got a "Best Costume" at my church youth group. I was very proud of this. Another year, I got "Best supervillain." I knew I was literally the only one who had dressed up as a supervillain, but I liked it anyway, because it reminded me of the fun I had had.
The way you wrote it, you implied that "Best use of a bedsheet" is a possible award. I don't think the person who got that would think "Ha, I beat all you guys in bedsheet use! THIS IS THE MOST PRESTIGIOUS RESULT POSSIBLE!"
I think they'd enjoy it, for what it was. A memento of the fact that they had been there, and a way to remember the fun it had been. Whereas you would enjoy yours, for what yours was. Which was saying "You had the best costume there."
When I was younger, I was in a youth soccer league. Everyone got a trophy, but most teams got "participant" trophies. The #1 team got a "league winner" trophy, and the #2 got a "Runner-up" trophy.
We didn't have any illusions that "Participant" meant the exact same thing as "Winner."
Despite that, all the kids totally knew that a participant trophy didn't mean you won something. It was just a nice reminder of your time at the league. I kept all the trophies I got (most of them were winner, one was a runner-up, and one was participant) and I liked all of them.
If your costume got a "Winner" and the person in a cat-girl outfit got a "Least dressed," I don't think that that would be the example of "Exact same award."
I got a "Best Costume" at my church youth group. I was very proud of this. Another year, I got "Best supervillain." I knew I was literally the only one who had dressed up as a supervillain, but I liked it anyway, because it reminded me of the fun I had had.
The way you wrote it, you implied that "Best use of a bedsheet" is a possible award. I don't think the person who got that would think "Ha, I beat all you guys in bedsheet use! THIS IS THE MOST PRESTIGIOUS RESULT POSSIBLE!"
I think they'd enjoy it, for what it was. A memento of the fact that they had been there, and a way to remember the fun it had been. Whereas you would enjoy yours, for what yours was. Which was saying "You had the best costume there."
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