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Re: Problem's with 2015…
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The 14 points added to your QA from a single match was under the assumption that your average was low otherwise (40). However, the average will move less the higher up in QA you go. Crunching the numbers, the QA shift is still significant while there is a radically different on the table, but I just wanted to clarify that 14 points is not always 14 points.That isn't to say the phenomenon doesn't exist. In fact, looking at GTRE, if you remove the highest scoring Qualifier (which had the top 2 OPR on the same team), then 1246 would drop from rank 6 to around 36 - assuming they kept their average for their other matches. However, this is also a function of the low point-scoring of a majority of teams there - "low point-scoring" to me is averages less than coopertition + a few noodles. This leads to many teams being near the same QA, thus you get rank jumping. |
Re: Problem's with 2015…
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My initial opinion of this game hasn't changed much (if you're curious) so I'll take your prompt. 1.) The step bisecting the field that eliminates robot interaction should go, but keep the landfill set up as is, an initial barrier with a small path to the other side that can be removed by stacking or moving totes out of the way. 2.) Establish platforms on either side of the field and punish teams for knocking down opposing alliances stacks. (Alternatively establish one scoring platform that teams will have to jockey for space on, but that might get difficult.) 3.) Reduce the number of totes available behind the drivers station. 4.) Go back to Win/Loss/Tie structure. These changes would allow teams to play active defense without having the stack knockdown problem of 2003 and at the higher levels could turn the game into a struggle for scoring resources as teams try to gather totes and bins before the other alliance can steal them. It keeps the interesting engineering challenge but doesn't diminish the feeling that each match is a direct competition. |
Re: Problem's with 2015…
I guess the big problem that I have with the game is the way that the rankings work along with coopertition points. Teams that may take an entire match to do coopertition points and never do anything else end up ranked extremely high seeing as co-op factors into your ranking at multiple levels. Then during playoffs, these robots who end up as alliance captains have almost nothing to do during the match and struggle to complete other aspects of the game, because all they needed to do throughout quals to get a reasonably high ranking was co-op. On the other hand, versatile robots that perform a lot of functions often get short-changed on the ranking.
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Re: Problem's with 2015…
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In 2011 robots that had a working mini bot (in competitions that didn't have that many) would rank high, but lose because the other top teams had faster mini bots and could score tubes. I could go on, but my point is that as competitions go on, most quals will have co-op points and power house teams will be able to outscore teams that rely on them. |
Re: Problem's with 2015…
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In prior years: Your QS was boosted by a factor of probably 1.7 or 1.8 per match allied with an elite, and shrank by about the same for every match you played opposing one. In 2015, playing against an elite has no impact on your QA (unless you yourself are an elite, and they're stealing step RC's you need). Playing allied with an elite boosts your QA. In 2015, there is no such thing as a 'hard' schedule (like in prior years if each match you were put up against elites). Just one that doesn't ally you with as many elites, which you can combat by simply being a little better yourself. |
Re: Problem's with 2015…
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This, I think, is a problem with this year though. Using finals at Michigan States as an example, I believe that it will be extremely predictable. Anyone paying attention to what each single robot can put out will be able to add together that alliance scores and predict who will win. The only variance upon this is teams that grab from the center 4 RCs. To put that in contrast, 2011 Michigan States finals saw some of the most competitive strategies I have seen. The number 1 alliance was knocked out in the quarter finals by the 8th alliance from strategy alone. No team broke down, no minibots exploded, just pure strategy (sorry to bring this back up 217, 469, and 201). The lack of defense this year is a double-edged sword. On one hand you aren't purposely trying to break your opponents so you can get points for it (looking at you, week one 2014), but on the other higher levels of play will lack any diverse strategy. |
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Re: Problem's with 2015…
Different perspectives will lead to different conclusions on the match schedules and ranking systems. For teams with legitimate aspirations of the #1 spot, this ranking system is an improvement. You can't be completely "sunk" by alliance partners or opponents the way you could in some other games. However, this is not the vantage point of the vast majority of FRC.
For the middle of the pack teams, these rankings are just as random as always. Your average can be considerably buoyed by great partners, opponents willing/able to co-op, and some good luck. 708 vaulted from the middle of the pack to 9th at Chestnut Hill after scoring 165 points with 225 and 1218 in the last qualification match. Your average can plummet when paired with teams incapable of scoring (or worse, teams that knock over stacks) or working opposite of teams that fail to get their yellow totes on the step. There are still "easy" and "hard" matches this year, they just look different than in years past. |
Re: Problem's with 2015…
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Re: Problem's with 2015…
The change to eliminations really made elimination strategy one of my favorite things about this year's game. At Alamo, it was a little boggling before quarterfinals, but once we had a strategy down it worked really efficiently. Having a seperate strategy for each match was interesting as well.
"If they take the two center cans in auto, which totes should we clear first so that our alliance member can get the remaining cans on the step?" Before actually working with our alliance members, I thought we'd be lucky to make it out of quarters, but by playing on each others strengths really well, we gave one hell of a fight. Before our last semifinal, the difference between us and the #2 seed was .33 of a point. I think this year's game is great. |
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Re: Problem's with 2015…
A while back I made a post about Stacking vs Capping vs ????. I talked about how the resource pile splits were interesting, two feeder stations, two scoring platforms, two landfill pits. I'm starting to wonder if the GDC underestimated teams abilities and thought teams were going to take one resource and tackle it instead of these teams coming off doing everything. I really wish at some point post season the GDC would step forward and say. "Hey this is what we envisioned would happen with the game, this is what we did to try and accomplish that." Just start an open conversation with the people who just played their game. A lot of game developers when analyzing game health do extensive research and review including interviews. Does the GDC just do this and I'm not aware?
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Re: Problem's with 2015…
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Re: Problem's with 2015…
This game has been great skills wise. I've seen some teams really excel, and some teams really have to explore new types of boundaries, thinking outside the box. Technically, this is a really cool game for engineering purposes. However, like I've said before, this game is really like playing competitive solitaire. For the past few years, between things like GameSense and the competitive and quick gameplay, I thought FIRST was going for an exciting, crowd enticing type of game, relaying it to more of a sport-atmosphere. However, they are completely cutting that aspect of gameplay out this year.
Honestly, saying "I helped build a robot that competes with and against other robots in competition, and we lunch 2-foot-big yoga balls through goals 10 feet of the ground!" is a lot easier to say and makes being a geek much more okay than saying "I helped build a robot that stacks boxes, and then puts a trash can up on top." |
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