before today, there were (as far as I can tell) 16212 charged up matches played. Of those, only 116 managed to fill the grid, with Archimedes Q116 being the only double grid in the world for a total of 117 grids filled.
In the 140 matches played today, there have been 144 filled grids, with 39 double grids.
I’m not sure what you want to do with this information, but its there.
The easiest way to make a table is to input the data into a spreadsheet (I use google sheets) and then copy/paste into the post entry. It should do the markup formatting for you.
Cool data though! Really shows how impactful team update 21 was since most of those double grids would have only been decided by auto or penalty
I would love to know if these were the statistically closest elimination or Einstein matches in modern history…if someone wants to calculate that…
It sure seemed like it since that’s kind of how this game works.
The first few matches of playoffs were absolute chaos. Every field playing 4 straight matches with no breaks, and every match at a level higher than we’ve ever seen before. I was trying to keep an eye on as many as I could but just as I thought there was a new high score on Galileo, a new, higher score got set on Hopper.
Usually we see high scores set in quals, but I guess this game just really benefits from good teamwork to make it so almost all of the highest scores were in elims.
Yea, I think quals had a different strategy as teams were pushing for a higher total score rather than trying to get a high stats themselves. Autos wouldnt be optimized. Triple balance wasn’t worth going for. Also, driver station matters a lot and being able to include that in strategy adds a couple of cycles by itself.
A really easy way to see this is alliance 6 on Johnson. All 3 of us played quals match 129 together and scored 155 clean. Our first playoff match, we scored 195 clean, and after fixing a few issues went on to score 207 clean twice. Huge difference between quals and elims
In the team introduction for 1323 for Finals 1, @R.C clapped 7 times, the same number as the number of supercharged nodes that the alliance scored. It’s a good thing there weren’t sign stealers that picked up on the signal.