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#1
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Re: 2008 Game Format Preference
I would vote for alliances as well but with some kind of twist. I love how these games work, but I think a 6 vs 0 or 2v2v2 game would be alot more fun and really change up the system. GDC I am giving you permission to do whatever you want with alliances, Dave please don't torture me that much.
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#2
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Re: 2008 Game Format Preference
Having three (or more) alliances would not work for the reason Jane posted. Back in the days of pre-alliances, if you had two average robots going up against a third powerhouse robot, the two other robots would form a secret alliance before the match to take down the other team. I'd rather have known alliances than secret ones conspiring against ours.
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#3
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Re: 2008 Game Format Preference
Wow!!! I like all the ideas presented here. They're really cool.
I especially like the 2v2v2 idea. But there is one suggestion I would like to throw out to you guys.I think that the game next year should be divided into 2 parts. 1) Individual Based 2) Alliance Based The first part of the game should include a section where teams play by themselves and try to score depending on the means of the game so that people don't limit themselves to building a robot based purely on defense. The way I see it, there should also be qualification points based on the robot's abilities, ie. scoring through the normal method and gaining bonus points (so blocking doesn't gain any qualification points ). This should be determined while the robots are playing during the test matches and qualifying rounds. And robots that don't have enough qualification points aren't allowed to continue into the final round, even if they do well during the qualification rounds. Then the second part of the competition should include alliance matches were teams work together to achieve the goal, something like this year's competition. Then during the alliance selection, teams form an alliance of 2 or 3 (based on whether you like 2v2v2 or 3v3 matches) and teams w/o enough qualification points should be removed from the list of teams that can compete. To give an example of this (based on this year's game), lets say Team BLUE has a bot which can score on the middle and low rack easily and has a ramp. That team would get 3 pts for low scoring, 5 pts for mid scoring and the ramp boosts there score another 5pts, totaling up to 13 pts. Then lets say Team RED builds a robot which can reach all three heights for the tubes and score well. Then this team would get 3 pts for low scoring, 5 pts for mid scoring and 8 pts for high scoring, bringing their total to 16 pts. Now since both teams have more than 8 pts, which would be the cut-off for qualification points, both teams could possible make it into the final rounds. And robots which can't achieve this minimal requirement are automatically disqualified. (Qualification points don't affect your actual score in the game) Don't ya think this is much cooler!? At least we'd see MUCH MORE robots achieving the tasks given during the competition and less robots designed based purely on defense.Don't get me wrong. I think defense is still a vital component of the game. And it is what makes FIRST competitions fun. But teams should really be focusing more on the task at hand.Plus (and this has little to do with the competition format), I think that there should be an award for teams who manage to gain the highest number of qualification points. That way, more people would try harder to build a cool robot and just some defender. |
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#4
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Re: 2008 Game Format Preference
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#5
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Re: 2008 Game Format Preference
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#6
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Re: 2008 Game Format Preference
I am for alliances! If we drop back to a 4 team match then there will be a lot less matches played.
Offense is nothing without defense. How can you tell if you have made a good robot if you have no competition to test with. Auto manufacturers test and retest so that when products are put into extreme conditions they should not fail. What would a car race be if the best designed and best looking car got on the track and went 10 MPH around the track and then drove to the winners podium. It would mean nothing. If you were to sit down and play a game by yourself then you would have no competition and really would never know how good you were or what was needed to improve. |
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#7
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Re: 2008 Game Format Preference
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What I'm trying to say is that the game should be divided into 2 parts, with individual and team control. That way more teams would focus on building a robot that can actually score and not just push other bots around. Defense can be a very good strategy, but if that's all your robot can do, then your at the mercy of you alliance and opponents. Having matches were the teams must play by themselves should at least motivate next year's teams to build robots that can score and defend (if necessary) |
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