@Higs: I wasn't attempting to argue, I was attempting to provide a different viewpoint. Perhaps my vision is clouded at the moment because of my reaction to your confrontational (and somewhat condescending) tone, but I do believe that it is possible to have conflicting viewpoints.
There is inherent luck in the game - there is simply no way around that. There is still a significant amount of skill in the game (how else could there be consistent top players?), and there is no reason to manipulate an otherwise fair system to accommodate luck. The brackets may be slightly unfair, but I don't feel that the way the brackets turned out this time around is a legitimate reason to overthrow an entire system. I'm not a fan of double-elimination in general, even when the brackets work out nicely (I'm biased from chess), but I don't feel like changing the system is a necessary resolution to an unfortunate bracket.
What I was saying regarding deckbuilding and personal elements is that I do not believe the losers bracket needs to be compensated because there is "inherent luck" in the game. While I agree that there is inherent luck in the game, and we've certainly got more than our fair share of it, this shouldn't have an effect on how brackets are constructed.
In short, I agree with you that double-elim is not the optimal format, but for different reasons than you are stating.
@deuce22: Nitpick: 4 wins
Teams that lose early should, IMO, be at an early disadvantage. The team that we just beat, Armedilgo, needs one more win to make finals, which seems perfectly fair to me. The way the brackets turned out were not caused by the format, or RNG, they were caused by the number of byes that were given. With the number of teams that there were, double-elimination just isn't pretty, as is illustrated.
Again, I'm significantly biased and thus can't really be taken too seriously, but the bottom line is the format isn't broken, just this time was.