It's a little bit scary. I've been playing FF a long time. I've thought about and experimented with different draft strategies, and I know a lot about each team and each player. If there were some kind of spontaneous fantasy football draft that broke out around my office complex, with no preparation or even cheatsheets allowed, I would totally clean up. The advantage I'd have would be overwhelming.But I think if you took Jessica Simpson, or even Shakira, and showed her how to use the Draft Dominator (with FBG projections) five minutes before the draft, most of my advantage would be gone. It's like a good chess player going up against a total novice who happens to have Deep Blue running in the background . . . the total novice can suddenly play like an expert.There's still an advantage to be gained from knowing how much risk is associated with each player and how they'll fit together as a team -- stuff a computer can't tell you, precisely. And of course, well-informed owners still have a large post-draft advantage in making waiver-wire pickups and stuff.But if you're drafting against a field of Draft Dominator-users, you can't just run over them with clearly superior value picks all draft long. Even total novices will be able to make sensible picks based on player value (tailored to scoring system), team need, roster limits, strength of schedule, who's likely to still be available in the following rounds, etc.Philosophically, I don't know whether I really like that or not, but it's the new reality. Published "expert" cheatsheets have always leveled the playing field somewhat, but nothing like the Draft Dominator. You can totally mess up a draft going from a cheatsheet by failing to appreciate positional needs and so forth, but you really can't mess up a draft with the DD. (You can draft guys who tear their ACL the next day, but that's different.)