Grumbling Bear
Chieftain
- Joined
- Jul 2, 2009
- Messages
- 33
I would like to apologize for offending anyone with this statement in advance but i simply have to make it. How is it someone playing Immortal diff has no clue about VA uprisings?
I would like to apologize for offending anyone with this statement in advance but i simply have to make it. How is it someone playing Immortal diff has no clue about VA uprisings?
I believe HoF games do not have VA
I would like to apologize for offending anyone with this statement in advance but i simply have to make it. How is it someone playing Immortal diff has no clue about VA uprisings?
When you have outcomes based on luck vs outcomes based on skill in games, it is the outcomes based on skill that we can control. [..]
However, in meaningful competitions it's logical to minimize the impact of luck in the game, otherwise the person who wins only did so due to chance...but if the outcome is a dice roll what's the point in doing the competition? Just roll a die and give someone a trophy.
Different competitions have different amounts of luck or randomness involved (chess vs ice-hockey), but they all have a component of luck to a different degree. If you eliminated luck entirely then, I believe, you could calculate the winner before the game and that would not be much fun...
In the improbable case that was possible, that doesn't mean that they would be able to solve itSome players on this forum would reduce Civ to a math equation if they could.
In the improbable case that was possible, that doesn't mean that they would be able to solve itIf it is impossible to awnser the Three Body problem....
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Ouch, rrolo, that made my head hurt.![]()
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You have 3 bodies ( assumed point masses ) with known mass, movement direction and velocities. Use Newton gravity law to calculate the trajectories of all the bodies
In my opinion skill (at least in CIV) is to prepare for all sorts of unexpected events. I believe that the entire point of the game is to continuously try to stack the odds in your favor as much as possible with the occasional well timed daring gamble.
Different competitions have different amounts of luck or randomness involved (chess vs ice-hockey), but they all have a component of luck to a different degree.
If you eliminated luck entirely then, I believe, you could calculate the winner before the game and that would not be much fun...
@TMIT:
My advice: don't ever take up golf.![]()
I have one word for you , just one word: windHow is golf in any way shape or form a game that is majorly altered by luck?
I have one word for you , just one word: wind![]()
Sure, skill can prepare or overcome uncertainty. That's not the point.
The point is that there are a certain class of events that do not cause the player to vary actions (as the optimal decisions don't change), but can impact the outcome of the game positively or negatively. It's rational to minimize those, since they basically reduce a part of a game to chance ----> flip coins, roll dice, or play war and it's similar...I don't see how an element of "heads or tails to see if I win, or win sooner" is fun.
I guess there aren't too many golfers in this crowd.The rules of golf go out of their way to make luck a factor in the game.
- Your tee shot hits a bird and drops into the lake in front of you. Too bad, -2 strokes off your score. A game that was purely emphasizing skill would allow you to hit the shot again with no penalty.
- You hit a 300 yard drive into a divot that a previous player left in the fairway. Too bad - play it as it lies.A game that was purely emphasizing skill would allow you to drop the ball in a new (undivoted) spot with no penalty.
- You're playing in the US Open, and the course is wet from a lot of rain. Your drive lands in the middle of the fairway, and the ball has a big glob of mud on it. Too bad - play it as it lies.A game that was purely emphasizing skill would allow you to clean and replace the ball with no penalty.
I could go on and on, golf is just full of examples like this. And tournaments have been lost (and won) on incredible strokes of luck completely outside of the players control.