Topic: Widelands tournament 2017: subscriptions started (and random chit-chat)
king_of_nowhere Topic Opener |
Posted at: 2017-03-05, 23:11
I actually considered implementing an elo rating system (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elo_rating_system) for widelands. I didn't because we didn't play often enough. On the other hand, while I am unemployed I have a lot of free time I may just use to do something of that sort... EDIT: there is also the question of whether such a rating system should separate different win conditions. Edited: 2017-03-05, 23:33
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king_of_nowhere Topic Opener |
Posted at: 2017-03-06, 17:58
I actually calculated the elo rating that would result from the tournament, and it took less than one hour. I did it by settting the starting conditions in a datasheet (1500 for scoring 50% of points, minus/plus 200 points for every extra point scored) and then manually adjusting all the values until the expected score for everyone was very close to what they actually did achieve (to within 0.12 points, with the exceptions of janus and epicspartan who only won against the forfait and could not be fitted well). The resulting rating, while of dubious accuracy, has a surprisingly large distribution. For reference, a difference of 200 points means the stronger player is expected to win 75% of times, a difference of 350 points that he is expected towin 90% of times (actually to score 75% or 90% of points, including draws, but since drws in widelands are virtually nonexistant...). So here's the rating as found. it does not include variations for the second phase, otherwise there would be a big boost of notabilis a small boost for me and worldsavior, and a large loss for sirver
If I know him well, einstein may want to develop a program to automatically fit the rating to a better degree of accuracy than my manual fitting, in which case I have no problems sending him the datasheet. Anyway, those values aren't of much worth, since 5 games (4 for those who got a forfait, 3 for epicspartan and janus who forfaited last turn, 2 for toptopple who retired) are really not much to cconstruct a statistically significant rating. Top Quote |
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einstein13 |
Posted at: 2017-03-07, 21:07
I don't think that Elo rating will be good for us. This ranking was created for chess: game where you can definitely say that there are strict rules: two players; win, lose or tie. In Widelands it is much more complicated system. You have multiple players at once with win-lose part, but not every loser should be punished as much as others. einstein13 |
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WorldSavior |
Posted at: 2017-03-08, 00:47
@Elo-List: Intéressant... Implementing a ranking would be nice indeed...
Aha, okay... So you had an idea about a ranking, king_of_nowhere had one and I thought that a ranking would be good, too. I'm wondering if someone would be against such a ranking.
It could seperate the different win conditions, but also provider one further list where everything is combined, right? If not both is possible, I would suggest to separate the win conditions
Created for chess, yes, but also adapted for soccer... The game "Age of Mythology" had or has a ranking which also includes team-matches of two teams with identical numbers of players. I don't know how it works, but that shows that a ranking can also be possible for more matches than 1vs1 EDIT:
Well, you can combine a large map with an 4-hour-wincondition and everything is fine
Haha, no, it should not be necessary that it's faster than one round per week, should it? Edited: 2017-03-08, 00:53
Wanted to save the world, then I got widetracked Top Quote |
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king_of_nowhere Topic Opener |
Posted at: 2017-03-08, 02:36
@ ranking: the problem with team games does not exist in this case, as all the games considered were 1v1. league of legends adopted a ranking system (which, if you ask me, was much better than the current tiers, for at least it meant something) where the team ranking was likely the average of all members of the team. yes, one could perform well and still lose cause of noob teammates, or he could feed all the game and be carried by the rest of the team. statistically, those even each other out, and in a large number of games you still get the individual level with good accuracy. It worked because teams were shuffled all the time, and there was a large number of games. That is the problem, number of games. elo ranking works when you have many games to even out statistical oddities, so the more games, the more it is accurate. we just don't play enough. though if my plan of two tournamments every year kicks off, it may become feasible for the recurring players. Dividing the ranking for win condition is even less feasible: how many wood gnome games were ever played in tournament? if memory serves, none before the 2016 tournament.
yeah, but the point of playing on a large map is to go really big, and terminating the game after 4 hours defies that. though there will be an instance of this happening, but it's not what i mean with "large map, long game" Top Quote |
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WorldSavior |
Posted at: 2017-03-13, 00:06
Well, many people might play much more often than in tournaments...
I'd say: The point of playing on a large map is to play normal Widelands Wanted to save the world, then I got widetracked Top Quote |
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king_of_nowhere Topic Opener |
Posted at: 2017-03-13, 03:41
friendly games do not count towards the ranking. unless people decide to play a ranked game in advance, in which case they would have to send me a replay, and not many would want to go through the hassle.
well, that's your definition of normal. my definition of normal widelands is either a small map in multiplayer, or a strange AI challenge. if you look at the record, most tournament games were on small maps (i suppose the rationale is the same), and playing a balanced map (or even an unbalanced map, just "normal" unbalanced rather than "one of my crazy challenges" unabalanced) against AI became boring very quickly. Top Quote |
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einstein13 |
Posted at: 2017-03-13, 22:35
@Normal Widelands einstein13 |
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king_of_nowhere Topic Opener |
Posted at: 2017-03-13, 23:47
well, you may notice how I always built a full economy. even my challenge maps always require you to build a full economy, they just make it really hard to do. So maybe we agree on what it is to play widelands, we just disagree on the circumstances... P.S: last tournament had a lot of fast contact maps for two reasons: 1) the previous tournament had no fast contact maps, there was always plenty of time before meeting the opponents, so I wanted to make something different 2) with late contact maps, I can easily micromanage fully promoted soldiers, and the handful of people whom I knew from the previous tournament could keep up with it (einstein, mars) were not playing. I was afraid all my games would be forgone victories with the same mechanism and the tournament would be boring as a result, so I put smaller maps to give others better chances to face me while I was still vulnerable. I still expected to dominate the tournament, but at least that way maybe one or two games would be close. In retrospect it sounds silly, I know. EDIT: but as far as I could know, none of the really strong players were participating (sirver only performed average in previous tournaments) and the chances that some of the new ones would turn out to be very strong were small. I think I made the right decision with what I knew at the time. Edited: 2017-03-14, 00:28
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AlleyJazz |
Posted at: 2017-03-14, 13:22
Wow,either I haven't checked the forum in a while or I need glasses... either way,I'd love to play! Top Quote |