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Re: Value of Coopertition
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Re: Value of Coopertition
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Think of it this way: The job is building houses. What goes into building a house? Obviously digging and building a foundation, framing, roofing, drywall, etc. Then there's also plumbing. A house wouldn't sell without plumbing. Are all contractors great at all parts of building a house? Probably not. Many do all of the parts, are great at most, but not so efficient at others. Enter people that specialize in plumbing. Plumbers at one point may have said, "I'd like to build houses" then realized that building an entire house is a bit over his/her head. So instead of learning all of the intricacies of building entire houses, he/she decide to become so good at plumbing that the jack of all trades builders can't compete in plumbing. So, the majority of the contract will go to the house builder and perhaps a small part will go to the plumber. OR, the entire contract of the house building will go to the contract, and the contractor might subcontract the plumbing to someone that is better at it. The point is, in order to build the best house, there are some small specialty parts that a general contractor is not as good at as a specialist. That's a lot like last year's game in which the teams that were great at the main part of the game weren't necessarily as good at the end game as the end game specialists, and the end game specialists decided they were best off building a great robot to do one thing well and demonstrate their worth in that area. |
Re: Value of Coopertition
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Re: Value of Coopertition
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The problem with your statement, as others have also noted above, is that your are defining what is important and what constitutes the challenge. First you say that the point is "to play the game, with the goal of winning." Then you are essentially defining "meeting the challenge" as scoring baskets. That statement does not follow the previous. Playing the game constitutes much more than just scoring baskets. To win the scoring portion your team needs to score more than the other team. This does not in any way imply that all robots must attempt to only score as many as possible. Scoring one basket and keeping your opponent from scoring any is a viable strategy and I don't believe you can argue that this is not playing the game. This year FIRST decided that winning would be worth 2 points with balancing also worth up to 2 points. I would argue that this statement can be seen as showing coopertition is equally as important as winning the scoring portion. Essentially FIRST told you how match scoring would work, how ranking would work, and what needed to be accomplished to obtain these scores. It is up to the teams to decide how they want to accomplish these goals. Meeting the challenge is whatever the team determines it to be. |
Re: Value of Coopertition
Interesting points. The way I see it FIRST has been discouraging defense for the last few years. In my opinion there is nothing wrong with using defense as part of a strategy. It is also good to see that there are rookie teams that are able to get robots on the field and do something to contribute to the game.
As far as the house analogy, if I am looking for someone to build me a house and you come to me with a plumbing design, I will refer you to the company that gets the contract for the job I am looking for (building my house) The most important thing in this program is what the students learn and take away from it. I have heard Dean say more than once, If you think you are in a robot competition, you missed the point. (not a direct quote but you know the line) These students are learning things that they do not know they are learning. I hope that none of them are coming away from the program thinking that that they will be rewarded for not attempting what is presented to them. How we measure success is very different from team to team and person to person. There are many teams out there that we all strive to have a portion of the real success that they have achieved. That can only be done by trying, and learning from those teams around us, not only in what they do well, but if we are lucky by learning from their mistakes as well as ours. |
Re: Value of Coopertition
GBK,
Ultimately the GDC gives us a game with rules about scoring and qualifying and ranking. Adding the constraint "this is the primary objective, therefore teams should do this" is adding an artificial constraint. In 2011, you could win most matches with a minibot. In 2010, the mere act of hanging regularly was worth about 2x the average team score. Ramps in 2007, Human players scoring over 50% of moonrocks at the championship in 2009... Pretty much every year has an aspect were excelling at a less prominent task is more valuable than poorly scoring at the main objective. Now back to your original question if the Co-Op bridge was overvalued, I think the Co-Op had some distinct issues. 1. If you opponents chose to not Co-Op, you would loose ranking. 2. At events where the Co-Ops were over 50% (Troy, MSC, and Championship) strange things occurred where teams got giant Co-Op scores without Co-Oping themselves. 3. Co-Oping dissappeared in Elims, which made the game a bit odd as it changed gears from qualifying to Elims. (some people like this, but I think it confuses spectators and many teams). |
Re: Value of Coopertition
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I agree with the sentiment that the primary objective is to build a robot that plays the game well, not necessarily every challenge or task contained within the game. Good example being Zone Zeal. We made a robot that was arguably one of the best ball collectors/scorers that year, but we had goals full of balls stripped from us routinely. We completed the flashiest, and ostensibly the 'main challenge' of the game VERY well. The robot was not very successful in elimination matches because the outcome of the Game rested on holding those goals in your scoring zone, which we couldn't do. |
Re: Value of Coopertition
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-Brando |
Re: Value of Coopertition
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Average alliance score (post penalties) in 2010 was 4.17 which averages out to just under 1.4 points earned per team. Hangs were worth 2 points which would have changed the outcome of 29% of the matches that year. I don't have as detailed information for 2011 (we didn't run the same analysis) but the average points per team in 2011 was 11.3. - All data was based on the FMS twitter feeds. |
Re: Value of Coopertition
I usually don't like to pile on when my view has been so well covered by those who have posted before me, but I think it's important to say that if you want your team to be successful, design a robot that dominates a strategy. I'm of the view that it doesn't really matter what the strategy is. As long as you do it the best, you have a shot to win events. The "main challenge" or what FIRST may want teams to do is meaningless.
Some teams didn't even bother building the middle or low goals this past season. I think that was a mistake. If you don't even look at all of your options and get a true feel for the size of the game elements and the heights of the goals then you are doing your team a disservice. We decided to forego 1 point per ball by scoring in the middle hoop in favor of nearly 100% accuracy. Not a lot of teams respected us for it, but if you look at the data we outscored several "good" shooters. I've overheard people in the stands saying about shooters "Wow, they are good they make 2 out of 3 in the top hoop every time" and later hearing from other people that during our matches people would say "They don't miss but they are only scoring in the middle hoop" All the while both robots just scored the same amount of points. I believe that a team that scored in the lowest hoop but never missed would have made the elimination rounds at any regional. TL;DR Pick a strategy, ANY strategy, be the best at it and you will have a shot to win events. |
Re: Value of Coopertition
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885 on the other hand scored reliably on the 2nd level hoops and was the sole scoring robot for a finalist alliance. I guess the trick is hitting that sweet spot. |
Re: Value of Coopertition
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Re: Value of Coopertition
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Re: Value of Coopertition
There are two COMPLETELY different discussions here...
1. Was the co-op bridge overvalued this year? IMO, if FIRST was looking for an exciting basketball game... yes, it was overvalued. You could have built an amazing balancer and did nothing but convinced or brute forced other teams into co-oping with you and climbed your way to the top of the rankings, then been able to triple balance with two long bots, and win the competition. (I dont think I saw anyone really do this, but I think its because no one focused 100% of their effort on this) If FIRST was aiming to get us to think... and cooperate, perhaps it wasn't overvalued. It gave teams the choice... score baskets, balance/co-op, or do it all. If it hadn't been worth two points, I think a lot fewer teams would have put so much effort into doing it. 2. What is the "right" way to play the game?
Each team is going to have their own opinion in either discussion. The second discussion is a highly personalized and very divided topic. For me, if FIRST got the game completely right, top teams would have to be successful at all 3 to win the event. But its a very very tricky balancing act, and often years a strong analysis of the game points values can lead you to prioritize different features of your robot, and possibly realize that you don't need to do anything in Tele-op if you can score enough in auto or end game. |
Re: Value of Coopertition
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