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Re: NY Tech Valley Robot Rumble - October 4
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My apologies if I was derailing the thread too much with discussion of the mechanics of 2v2; I guess I'm just excited. |
Re: NY Tech Valley Robot Rumble - October 4
1493's practice bot is all apart as well. I think the 2v2 matches in Elims should be seriously considered. And then going to 3 team alliances for eliminations.
Possibly 4, 3 team alliances. Seeds 1-4 cant pick each other. Or 5- 3 team alliances, Seed 1 can accept a bye thru to the 2nd round or get the 1st pick. If they take the bye they then get 4th pick....same deal for 2nd seed etc. 4th seed has to take the bye if it gets to them. Just brainstorming, slow day at work.. |
Re: NY Tech Valley Robot Rumble - October 4
My comment about practice bots didn't only apply to the teams I listed. I know other teams coming have practice bots as well. I think it would be nice to have as many robots as possible at this event.
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Re: NY Tech Valley Robot Rumble - October 4
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Re: NY Tech Valley Robot Rumble - October 4
As far as I am aware, one of the goals for the event is to get every team 10 matches. If we did 2v2 in quals, it would mean making the event substantially longer. Also, then changing the game entirely for eliminations would throw all of these rookie drivers and refs/scorekeepers off for when it matters. Also consider that backups will likely be needed for elims. If every team is on an alliance then there may not be anyone on reserve.
Maybe we could instead be a little relaxed on turn around times between matches or have a driving frame as a qualifications reserve. If I'm correct, this is what battlecry at WPI has done. I just personally disagree with running 2v2 matches, and especially if it's not going to be consistent throughout the event. I think it just takes away from the "officialness" of the competition by straying from the actual game. |
Re: NY Tech Valley Robot Rumble - October 4
I was with 5254 when they played at the HERE (Hoboken Engineered Robotics Event) offseason competition where we played 2v2 matches through all of quals and then did 3v3 in eliminations. It was a ton of fun, and while different from typical competition I think the 2v2 matches were actually more fun to play in. The strategic decisions are a bit different but overall simpler which I think is great for teams training/testing new drivers. I personally enjoyed the change of pace from the typical 3v3 game. It was a 15 team competition and even with 2v2 matches we could barely keep up with the pace. It was a bit hectic but a lot of fun, with 3v3 matches in this event I think it would run teams way to hard.
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2v2 matches are a way to get a lot more playing robots and having fun in and having played in them before I highly recommend them for this size and kind of event. |
Re: NY Tech Valley Robot Rumble - October 4
As someone who has competed in a 2v2 offseason, 2v2 in qualifications can be great. You're not doing an offseason to have another official competition. However, you are commonly running new drive teams and pit crews. With a slowed match pace with 2v2 and fewer machines on the field, you're not throwing any new people into the inferno of a regional match and match cycle.
However, be intelligent when it comes to structuring eliminations. I don't want to detail to you how the old Robot Rumble in Richmond handled 2v2 elims for fear someone will adopt that idea in the future and credit/blame me for it. |
Re: NY Tech Valley Robot Rumble - October 4
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First I do want to clarify; I'm really excited about this event and appreciative of all of the hard work people have put into planning it. If we play 3v3 matches I don't think it will ruin the experience for us or anything like that. My intent here is just to look at some data to compare the two options; I really don't want to step on any toes or otherwise come across as making demands that would alienate anyone. Can't wait for the Rumble!
All of that said, I think there's a lot of merit to playing 2v2 than 3v3, at the cost of ~2 matches per team. Whether or not this is worth it is definitely up for discussion. For the purposes of this post, I'm assuming 16 "teams" (14 real robots + 2 practice bots). All schedules I generated for this were done in MatchMaker assuming 16 teams, aiming to avoid back to back matches, and the best "quality" possible as defined by the software. So how many matches can we possibly do? Given a 7:30 turnaround time and a 2:30 duration for each match, then that's 10 minutes a match. In 195 minutes, that's ~19.5 matches. For 3v3 with 16 teams, you can give everyone 7 matches in 19 rounds. For 2v2 with 16 teams, you can give everyone 5 matches in 20 rounds. For any amount of time near 200 minutes, you're going to get two more matches with 3v3 versus 2v2. This is a significant tradeoff. Now that we have a ballpark number of matches, Looking at the 2v2 schedule, no teams play any back to back matches. The minimum delta between matches is 2; 11/16 teams deal with a one match turnaround. Every team partners with 5 other teams and plays against 10 other teams. No team repeats playing with the same team or against the same team, though almost every team will interact with a team twice, once on each side. The 2v2 schedule is a lot nicer, but 2 fewer matches is a lot. --- As for the differences between quals and eliminations, I really don't think it's a big deal. It's about as big of a change as the coopertition bridge vs triple balancing in 2012. Trusses, assists, and goals are the same; all that changes is who's on the field. It's really not "completely different strategy" to skip the inbound / pass-back robot. That said, 3v3 would still be a lot of fun and allow for a bit more... "variability"... in alliance partners. |
Re: NY Tech Valley Robot Rumble - October 4
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Claiming that 4:45 is an unrealistic turnaround time is false, and not the way that match turnaround times are usually described. Most events in season run sub-7 minute turnarounds (from start of match to start of match). It is not especially ambitious to run turnarounds that are a bit over 7 minutes. Don't forget that, aside from some practice robots, these robots have mostly run enough matches to make connection to the field old hat. |
Re: NY Tech Valley Robot Rumble - October 4
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In that case, plenty of time for 10 matches with 3v3. If we switched to 2v2, we'd have to play 7 matches. A little bit different... My points about how match scheduling works I think are still valid, but 10 matches in a 16 team event isn't ambitious for 200 minutes. My mistake. :o |
Re: NY Tech Valley Robot Rumble - October 4
I don’t advocate a 2v2 qualification route for various reasons. Firstly, the scoring of aerial assist was designed to play as a 3v3 game both on the basis of teamwork as an attribute as well as the strategic implications of the 30pt-3 assist bonus. Assuming the scoring the values remain unchanged (see two paragraphs below) the maximum amount of points that can be scored per cycle is 30pts. I think most 2v2 cycles though will be we worth 20 or 21pts though because it is unlikely that all teams will be able score high and truss efficiently. I find the amount of points scored per cycle to be significant because teams that miss 1 or 2 auto balls compared an alliance that makes 2 or 3 auto balls will be 1 or more cycles behind.
Ex. Red Alliance misses 2 auto balls, but gets 10 pts for the mobility bonus. Blue alliance scores 2 auto balls both not hot for 30pts and gets 10 mobility points as well. Advantage Blue 40-10. At this point they are one 30pt cycle behind and would presumably clear the auto balls for one point. In 3v3 a 30pt deficit is much more manageable because 3 assists will immediately catch the Red alliance up in this scenario as well as providing one of the three robots the opportunity to defend the Blue alliance’s cycle. This scenario assumes that both scored balls for blue are “not hot” too; if either of the 2 balls scored is hot the red alliance is behind by more than a complete cycle. Also if 3 balls are scored in auto then the alliance will be almost 2 cycles behind. In short I think the 2v2 format makes comebacks very difficult if one alliance flops during autonomous and the other puts 2-3balls in the high goal. Additionally, changing the scoring values will make a lot of more work for scorekeepers who would likely have to add assist points to the score generated by the FMS. This is the event’s inaugural year and I think that keeping with the standard FMS team randomization for quals and assist scoring will help the event flow more easily. As Bobby already mentioned the change from 2v2 to 3v3 from quals to elims will inevitably cause confusion with drivers and scorekeepers. Another aspect of why I support stay with the standard 3v3 matches is that not all teams registered are not watching/posting on this forum. Half of the the teams registered did not post in this forum so they may or may not know that 2v2 matches are considered. I think that most teams registered with the intent to play 3v3 because it simulates a real regional or district in terms of the number of teams on the field. In regards to 2v2 being a better format to train new drivers, I respectfully disagree.While driving on the field may be “easier”, because of fewer robots on the field and defense, I think that exposing new drivers drivers to defense and a more cluttered field presents a more realistic challenge that they would see at regionals and districts. (Realistically, no shows rarely happen at the regionals have attended. My mentality to approach offseason events is that they should be a stepping stone to get both new and veteran drivers experience for the upcoming competition season and not as a way to learn driving the robot for the first time.) I also think that the 2-3 more matches that a 3v3 format will provide will allow for more opportunities for new drivers to work out the problems that come with a very brief 2min 30sec match. Sorry for writing a book. :) |
Re: NY Tech Valley Robot Rumble - October 4
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I can see both sides of the coin, however with the small pool of teams we have, a 2v2 Qual schedule would allow for more time between matches, as well as an interesting perspective on Aerial Assist I'd like to see play out. I think without rule changes, 2v2 Aerial Assist would make the best shooting teams more likely to sit atop the rankings at the end of the day, making for more interesting eliminations. That's my hypothesis, but I could be wrong, and there are arguments that having the best robots atop the rankings isn't necessarily the idea. I'll enjoy the event either way. I can't wait to see you all Saturday! |
Re: NY Tech Valley Robot Rumble - October 4
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Additionally if you want to see how a 2v2 matches play out I recommend you watch week 1 regionals from this year. Typically, 1 robot per alliance did not touch the ball at all during the match which is similar in my mind to a 2v2. Here is the match footage from Inland Empire (thanks 1678!) if you are interested. Quote:
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Re: NY Tech Valley Robot Rumble - October 4
My apologies for sparking such a contentious thread! I didn't mean to cause so much controversy, I was just proposing an idea. 3v3 will be fine.
I think the point raised about not all teams being on CD, and every team having signed up for this as a 3v3 event, are more valid than any arguments of improvements over 2v2. All of that said, I've got responses to pretty much everything that's been said lately, but in the interests of keeping the thread on track I'll keep this brief. PM me if you'd like to debate this privately. In short, 3v3 Aerial Assist didn't have a lot of strategic depth anyway (three assist cycles, do you truss or do you not, where does your inbounder sit), and with 20 points for 2 assists instead of 10 points the new game has about the same amount of depth (two assist cycles, do you truss or do you not, do you truss to the HP and IB to the low goal or do you inbound downfield and have your shooter hit the high goal and/or truss). The bigger auto deficit could be solved just by taking a ball off the field in auto, then it's only possible to score 2/3rds the points. I based my (earlier) opinion off the experiences of a teammate playing at a 2v2 event, competing at Finger Lakes in the elims with a largely 2-assist cycle strategy, and my general desire to give my students more time to strategize and repair an old robot. If we get more than 5 minutes between matches we can make it work but as of now I am absolutely sure we're going to be rushed constantly. I guess that's part of the fun. |
Re: NY Tech Valley Robot Rumble - October 4
I'm hoping for 2 v 2. Old skool, a la 2004!
The game will still play out and Game Announcing will be easier :] Kevin Leonard said it best. Longer turnaround times = more "Cotton-eyed Joe" :eek: I am very much looking forward to a beautiful day in Ballston Spa. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ballston_Spa,_New_York Make it rain! |
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