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big1boom 21-04-2009 10:16

Re: Lunacy Review
 
Likes:

The floor/wheels: It allowed teams to be effective with a simple drive system. But it also allowed teams to experiment. I know that our team as able to pull off something that we most likely couldn't have on carpet. With this floor, it allowed teams to be successful with low torque drive systems. Even to the point of having just one CIM powering the entire drive. It also allowed teams to try holonomic, and really helped me learn some physics. ex: Static/Dynamic Friction

The trailers: Moving goals created a nice challenge for every team.

Programming: A good traction control system was something unique and relatively cool.

Cons:

Human players starting with balls: I would have preferred to have the moon rocks start on the game field. Then some robots could have specialized in refueling of human players.

Bumper Rules: Rules should be crystal clear before kickoff.

Field problems: We had a few matches where our robot would disconnect/crash/or otherwise stop responding for reasons that we couldn't figure out. On the field we wouldn't respond, once we got back to the pit and tethered. We would have full responsiveness. Nothing changed except the field.


Overall I liked the game, however I think that HP influence was too great.

Andrew Schreiber 21-04-2009 10:50

Re: Lunacy Review
 
Ok, I'll bite.

Pluses
+Different drive surface, showed students that some challenges are radically different
+ Trailers, robot to robot interaction is something we all wanted, here it was
+ Lots of game pieces, one of my complaints about 2008 was the lack of game pieces for teams to use
+ Uniquely shaped game piece, for all its flaws the balls were pretty unique and it made people think of new ways of handling them
+Scoring/reffing was easy, a ball that had orange on it was worth 2 points regardless of whether it was scored while the planets were in alignment or if it was a full moon and penalties were pretty clear cut.

Deltas
^ Bumpers, I strongly disagree with bumpers, build a robot capable of withstanding a beating or expect it to be broken
^ Game pieces, flimsy and hard to find, plus some of us struggled to tell moon rocks and empty cells apart
^ Flooring, yeah it was cool, it was fun, lets not do it again. It was messy, it was expensive, and it was just generally a pain. Also, I cant imagine staring at it all day was very much fun
^ Single supplier for wheels, I love AndyMark to death but I cannot STAND to have to buy parts from one supplier, just a pet peeve of mine.
^ Inspections, not sure if this was a Michigan only problem or not but I know that a team could pass inspection at an event and then, without changes, not pass inspection at the next.
^ Player Stations, do I need to explain this? They shorted, they fried, they were just generally not fun. New technology, surely this will get fixed
^ Pile Ups, I didnt like it last year and I still dont like it, I cant understand why people like watching robots get piled up. More times than I can count I saw some team get pinned then the pinning team get pinned. Sooner or later 5 robots were pinned in a corner none of them getting out. I dont like this.
^ G14, Im not explaining this, find some of my other posts on this topic or PM me if you really dont understand why I disagree with it.

Overall I was a pleased with the game, Im not generally a fan of refrigerator games (2006/2009 etc) but this one managed to ALMOST hold my attention. Notice the almost, I hated watching this game. Building for it was fun though.

Ranking the games I have competed in (2004-Present)
1. 2004 - Hanging was fun
2. 2008 - Fast paced
3. 2006 - My first game for shooting things
4. 2007 - Ramps were fun but it was way too heavy defense
5. 2009 - See above
6. 2005 - Just didn't like the game

big1boom 21-04-2009 12:31

Re: Lunacy Review
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Andrew Schreiber (Post 852926)
^ Inspections, not sure if this was a Michigan only problem or not but I know that a team could pass inspection at an event and then, without changes, not pass inspection at the next.

Not just a Michigan problem.

We passed inspection fine in Midwest, then had to add more structural backing to our bumpers at Wisconsin.

233 Busman 21-04-2009 12:42

Re: Lunacy Review
 
I really disliked several things about Lunacy.

-G14. Need I say more. Please let this be only this year. I can understand the idea behind it, but it really doesn't seem logical to penalize people for doing well.

-The surface/wheels. Though it made sense to the theme, it still made the game annoyingly slow and created less variety among the bots. Overdrive had lots of variety, but this year was meh.

-If even one bot was pinned, you could stick a fork in your alliance, becasue your match is over. You lost. I watched all of the Newton division (except finals), the Curie finals, and Einstein, and it seemed that once a bot was pinned, their alliance probably lost.

-Too much human player involvement. I know this echoes pretty much every other post, but still...If a human player outscores a robot, then they have too much influence on the game.

I can't really find much good to say about Lunacy.

My personal preference of games since my beginning of FRC....

2008
2007
2009

Chris is me 21-04-2009 12:50

Re: Lunacy Review
 
Okay at this point I'm becoming a Lunacy apologist.

I'm not a fan of G14, but FIRST didn't just suddenly start punishing extreme wins. Look at the Ranking Points system in general.

It really sucks to be absolutely blown away by a team. I don't agree that the rule should be implemented, but I can see the point of it.

Quote:

Originally Posted by 233 Busman (Post 852991)
-If even one bot was pinned, you could stick a fork in your alliance, becasue your match is over. You lost. I watched all of the Newton division (except finals), the Curie finals, and Einstein, and it seemed that once a bot was pinned, their alliance probably lost.

Clever engineering solves this problem. Look at stuff like the Thunderchicken's shooter, teams with crab drives to escape pins more easily, or general rotating turret designs. Being pinned was the primary reason I supported a turreted robot, and it paid off: In one match our robot made 10 moon rocks while pinned!

Herodotus 21-04-2009 13:44

Re: Lunacy Review
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Chris is me (Post 852993)
I'm not a fan of G14, but FIRST didn't just suddenly start punishing extreme wins. Look at the Ranking Points system in general.

Ranking points are based on your opponents score, not their score in comparison to yours. So before winning by fifty points and winning by a hundred points made no difference. It was all about how well the opponents scored. I was under the impression that this was not designed to prevent blow-outs but rather designed to take into account the randomness of qualification rounds. So if your team beats 1114, 217, and 67 you are likely going to get more ranking points then playing against three robots that can't score, or two robots and a no show. It's to help prevent a team from riding to the top purely based on lucky matches.

Jeff Pahl 21-04-2009 14:13

Re: Lunacy Review
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by big1boom (Post 852985)
Not just a Michigan problem.

We passed inspection fine in Midwest, then had to add more structural backing to our bumpers at Wisconsin.

And I'm probably the guy who made you add it... and you were not the only team that had to do so...

We (the Regional Lead Inspectors) try very hard to make the inspections uniform from event to event. I know I hate the "but it passed at xxxxx" discussion as much as anyone. However, sometimes things slip by, especially if your first inspection was done by a new inspector, or if you didn't get inspected until Friday morning, etc. I always see little things on Saturday during the re-weigh that should not have passed. At that point, I try to point them out in case the team is going to another event, but unless it is something that gives a competitive advantage or is a safety issue, it's hard to ask the team to go change it before the elims.

Back to the topic of the thread: my biggest complaint about this year was the fact that the only thing that identified the alliance color was the trailer bumpers. I watched a lot of matches this year, both at regionals and Atlanta, and for all of them I was at field level. It was just about impossible to keep track of the colors unless you were right at the edge of the field. I don't know how the people sitting in the outpost stations did it. I really don't want to go back to the flags for various reasons, including the tendancy for them to go shooting off in various directions. However, I do wish the grey pipe in the center of the trailer had been painted with the alliance color. Also, as others have noted, with the robots and trailers there was a lot of equipment on the field, and it tended to all get bunched together. It was a lot like watching grade school soccer, where you can tell where the ball is because all the kids are in one pack around it. That's how a lot of the matches I watched seemed. Everyone was all in one big clump somewhere on the field.

As a mentor for a rookie team with essentially no funding this year, I loved the field surface. It was nice for once to know that they would be at least able to drive as well as everyone else without having to spend time and money we did not have trying to come up with some super-duper drivetrain. And the simple drivetrain meant that they got the robot done in time for the programmers to actually have some time with the new control system.

lukevanoort 21-04-2009 14:16

Re: Lunacy Review
 
Likes:
- Different game surface switched things up a bit
- Less penalties. After last year, this was a huge breath of fresh air
- Game pieces looked interesting
- Lots of game pieces (I think its more exciting than just a few big ones)

Dislikes:
- Different game surface was expensive to purchase
- The field was very cluttered
- Hard to tell who was winning
- Human players mattered a bit too much
- Completely rule-specified robot::floor interaction made it less likely for students to learn quite as much about designing drive systems (to be fair, you could go through the same analysis, but it was hard to justify doing so)
- Game piece was not readily available outside the US
- Long-term pinning stunk
- G14 struck me as a really weird and unnecessary rule

I have a hard time forming an opinion on the excitement factor for Lunacy. While it was great to see 1114/217/67/111/2056/68/etc. running around with a full load trying to catch an opponent, it was also really boring to see those same robots pinned in the corner or stuck in a traffic jam.

My rankings of games I was on a team for:
2006 (best)
2007
2008
2005 (I have a love/hate relationship with this one. As a rookie, I was mostly a spectator, and it was pretty dull and repetitive to watch; however, I would love to have been a drive coach for it)
2009 (worst)

Taylor 21-04-2009 14:26

Re: Lunacy Review
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by squirrel (Post 852401)
Perhaps a different take on some points?
4. The double/triple score rule encouraged us to build a robot that could score so well that we could win matches without needing supercells.

People have been quick and brutal in complaining about <G14>. This shows that it is NOT a penalty, NOT a way to punish teams for doing "too well," it's merely another way to incorporate different strategies into the game and push people beyond their comfort zones (it accomplished that last one very well!).


So I say to the GDC: Kudos for <G14>, thank you for the challenge, thank you for sticking with it in the face of severe backlash, and thanks for not doing it again next year.

(I expect CAGE Match will do away with <G14> - not for any philosophical reasons, but simply to make the event more streamlined and accessible.)

Al Skierkiewicz 21-04-2009 14:34

Re: Lunacy Review
 
I have said it before and I will say it again. When a robot can't function for whatever reason, a human should be allowed to score so that the team doesn't become disenchanted. I also believe that any game where the human player can swing the score or make a fateful last ditch attempt and score makes for an exciting game. I didn't like 2003 for that reason, humans had no effect even though they tried like mad.

Herodotus 21-04-2009 14:35

Re: Lunacy Review
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Taylor (Post 853034)
People have been quick and brutal in complaining about <G14>. This shows that it is NOT a penalty, NOT a way to punish teams for doing "too well," it's merely another way to incorporate different strategies into the game and push people beyond their comfort zones (it accomplished that last one very well!).


So I say to the GDC: Kudos for <G14>, thank you for the challenge, thank you for sticking with it in the face of severe backlash, and thanks for not doing it again next year.


I'm missing the logic. Because people hated it it couldn't possibly be a penalty? It's a good rule because people hated it? And you are certainly correct that it pushed people out of their comfort zones. FIRST isn't all about the robots, but what happens on the field is still a competition. Being worried about doing too well in a competition is absolutely ridiculous. All teams should always put their %100 into a match, and shouldn't be penalized for doing so. Being penalized for having a good robot is out of my comfort zone.

Chris is me 21-04-2009 14:38

Re: Lunacy Review
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Herodotus (Post 853021)
Ranking points are based on your opponents score, not their score in comparison to yours. So before winning by fifty points and winning by a hundred points made no difference. It was all about how well the opponents scored. I was under the impression that this was not designed to prevent blow-outs but rather designed to take into account the randomness of qualification rounds. So if your team beats 1114, 217, and 67 you are likely going to get more ranking points then playing against three robots that can't score, or two robots and a no show. It's to help prevent a team from riding to the top purely based on lucky matches.

I was thinking more from a defensive position. If you look at pure offense it seems fine, but considering how important D is this year (and many other years!) shutting down your opponent was bad.

I think FIRST tries to make rules people dislike so that you learn to deal with them. <G14> is a strategic element of the game, regardless of whether or not people think that they deserve a "penalty free win", so you have to play around it (or just not care about it; G14 has never impacted a match I've played when it was active)

Bongle 21-04-2009 14:44

Re: Lunacy Review
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Al Skierkiewicz (Post 853041)
I have said it before and I will say it again. When a robot can't function for whatever reason, a human should be allowed to score so that the team doesn't become disenchanted. I also believe that any game where the human player can swing the score or make a fateful last ditch attempt and score makes for an exciting game. I didn't like 2003 for that reason, humans had no effect even though they tried like mad.

Yes, but it is a spectrum: a good human player can swing a match if they are 25% as effective as a good robot too. I think Aim High had it right. If you had a bad robot, your human player could still make long shots for 1pt each, or reload an ally, or something like that. With Lunacy, a human player could be 100% as effective as a good robot.

One of the best suggestions I've heard came from one of our mentors: HPs should have had unrestricted scoring during autonomous, but then during TeleOp, could only pass balls through the airlock.

MattB703 21-04-2009 15:11

Re: Lunacy Review
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Mike Soukup (Post 852410)
Dear GDC, please create a game for 2010 that Cory absolutely hates, we seem to have good luck with those :D

ditto! :)

Best game ever - 1999
Some human player interaction, but it was callenging and it had an excellent end game.

Worst game ever - 2001
To anyone complaining about this game being boring, look up 2001 - Copertition FIRST

(I feel old)

JonellGregor 21-04-2009 15:29

Re: Lunacy Review
 
Likes
-A lot more strategy within an alliance. (You had to decide who would be playing defense, scoring, delivering empty cells, etc.)
-Less Penalties!!!
-A lot more game pieces, allowed everyone to have a chance to use them.
-Targets in games were always moving so it was more of a challenge to score
-3 targets for each alliance
-Different surface made it more interesting
-Had more of a theme to it
-More interesting to scout
-Drivers needed a lot more skill

Dislikes
-Human Player could change the outcome of the game way too much!
-The surface was expensive to buy and annoying to set up every meeting.
-Sometimes very boring to watch when all robots were pinned in a corner.
-G14 was horrible
-Game pieces were really annoying to find.
-There weren’t many unique ideas for robot manipulator. A lot of robots looked the same
-Inspections were always different. We were fine with our motors and everything until Atlanta. (Keep inspections constant)
-If a robot was missing or dead, it almost always ended in that alliance losing due to the open trailer
-The scoring during the game was almost always inaccurate. There were times when it said we were lost by almost 20 at the end of the game and then when the final score came out we won, and vice versa


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