Thanks for the reply. I've enjoyed your "let's play" greatly. As stated earlier, my free time is usually greatly limited, so if my participation in this thread suddenly ends, it is not because I'm rude or have lost interest.
Try bridge. You'll never look back. Beats any strategy game I have tried. Even chess, which I used to play competitively. Ironic, isnt't it? I think random events should be on and at the same time reccomend a game where chance is intentionally drawn to a minimum.
Being European, these references mean nothing to me, regretfully.Bills beat the Patriots or that the Ravens beat the Jets
In my experience, results of sporting events are very often basically a dice roll. Otherwise the bookies would run out of business, no?Bogus. Not only do sports have extremely minimal elements of chance, but that chance is up to decisions made by the player. Also, "skill" is not fixed.
Aside from the logical flaw in something being impossible in theory and then minimally possible in practice, I see nothing wrong here so far.
There can be no such thing as 0 luck factor. Consider a broader definition of "luck" here. If there was a 0 luck factor the shoot off will always end the same. If it doesn't, then there must be something that affects the outcome. Maybe one guy had one beer too many the night before, maybe he got a hickup at a crucial time. There can be a number of reasons, one cannot account for all possibilities. But the poor player will almost always lose, even if a number of things go his way. But just because it is possible that a fluke may happen, it doesn't mean it will happen. Probability factor may be so low, so both players die of old age before that, or perhaps win the lottery and find something better to do. This is what I meant when I wrote "theoretically impossible and practically almost so". I see no logical flaw here.Take a competition that has absolutely 0 luck factor: shooting 3 point shots indoors with identical lighting and no wind.
Difference between +1,5 & -1,5 wind velocity would probably affect the result with at least a foot, effect is huge. Has to do with air friction during the run up phase and even more so during the jump phase. I presume everyone has biked with and against the wind. The difference is monumental.How large an impact does this issue have on the jumps?
I had the impression that you object to events in competitions because they may create an unfair advantage. My point was that being lucky is not an unfair advantage. It is not unfair. It is just luck.Basically this point is true but has 0 relevance to the merits of events
I play random civs and from that point of view which civ and uniques I end up with is a dice roll. Religion spread may affect your strategy for the rest of the game, and one can very rarely controll wich one spreads to one first. Sure, it's not completely random, but very close to it.By the way, uniques and religions are not truly chance-based unto themselves and constitute bad examples.
What is "additional"? Where do you draw the line? Monty, Nappy, Shaka and you on a small continent, does that make a difference? Four spies in a raw failing and as a result city defences stay - is that an additional chance element? Is 3 spies failing additional? My point is that there are so many other things that can go wrong, that one more has no significant effect. Ok, you got the Bermuda triangle. But maybe on turn 35 you decided to go for "copper city" instead of "horse city". How can one possibly be sure that the bermuda triangle event would still have happened, had one gone with a different option earlier on? One may argue that in fact it was the decission to go for "copper city" early on that was the "game breaker". Which of course is cowcrap. No one can ever demonstrate that a certain event has a specific impact, because the event does not stand alone, but is a result of every action in the game thus far.Such a shame that we've already demonstrated times where adding an additional chance element such as events DOES make a difference. Believing otherwise is one's choice, but it's proven wrong.
Again. Regretfully, these titles mean nothing to me (that time issue again).starcraft 2 matches. Or matches between organized teams in Gears of War 3
Try bridge. You'll never look back. Beats any strategy game I have tried. Even chess, which I used to play competitively. Ironic, isnt't it? I think random events should be on and at the same time reccomend a game where chance is intentionally drawn to a minimum.