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It is 4:16, and I now have everyone's preferences. I will now begin to work on pairing people up for games.
I'm still not finished debugging the software for assigning games. In the meantime, if you're one of the people scheduled to play Shogi or Kamikaze Mortal Shogi, please let me know whether you prefer a checkered board, a plain board, or a marble board. Whichever board you prefer, you will be able to select your preferred piece set after the game starts.
Fergus, I don´t know the preferences of my adversaries in Shogi and KMS, but I like the Checkered Board, but if anyone prefer the Marble Board it is fine for me. The uncheckered Board has a green background color that shocks a bit on my eyes (I have some troubles with my vision, so this is not merely a capricious preference)
You have the same preferences as I do, Roberto. I prefer the checkered board, because it is easiest for me to visualize Bishop moves on it, and for whatever reason, perhaps the plainness of the plain board, it is the hardest one for me to visualize moves on. I prefer the marble board to it, because that board gives the playing area some visible terrain that helps me better distinguish the spaces from each other.
The tournament has now begun. I have assigned all the games for round 1. You should find your games on the logs page. I will later change the logs page to give the option of viewing only the games in the tournament.
The Tournement is developing nicely, players are using the time adds and gaining extra time, and many games are now in advanced stages. As I expected, some Grand-Chess games are in complex positions, and due the power of pieces, board size and central position of the King, material advantages are good, but not decisive. We have had two decisions at the present, both on Chinese Chess games, with victories of Antoine Fourriere and Michael Madsen, very strong players that must be deciding any of the top four positions at the end of the Tournement, in my opinion. Ultima games are being well played to the present, this is a notorious fact because this is the first experience for some players. Shogi and KMS are in intermedium stages, without great things to say yet. Glisky games are more or less pacific to the present, and many games are played in a conservative way. Good luck to everybody!
I would like to remind people about using the resign command when resigning from a game. To resign from a game, type 'resign' as your move. Don't just update the status field. When you enter 'resign' as your move, it will automatically update the status field for you, and it will make sure that there is a move that separates your comments from your opponent's last move.
I have not doubts, the popular classics are between the best playable and nice games, and its selection was a good fact. Grand-Chess, Shogi, Xiang-Qi, Ultima and Glinsky pass the proof without great effort, they are excellent!. We have to see the other games in scene... (including the modest contributions of some of us, many of them excellent too, in my biased opinion)
fergus, the info on how to resign should be added to the 'user's guide' page.
fergus, i sent you an email a while ago saying that i didn't jot down the payment details before you removed them from the site. did you get my email?
I remember getting an email of that nature, and I forwarded it to David Howe to answer. I no longer have any record of the address, but David should, because it is his address.
fergus, i dunno what your thoughts are, but i certainly don't mind if you stop the clock for mark thompson in our game.
The clocks will not be stopped for anyone under any circumstances. They were not designed to be stopped, and stopping them would defeat the purpose of using them. If I were to stop clocks, we may as well not use clocks at all and just play untimed games. The purpose behind timing games in the tournament is to keep the tournament as a whole from dragging on too long. This affects everyone in the tournament, not just those who can't play for a while and their opponents. Besides this, I designed the time controls to allow for the very sort of thing that has come up with Mark Thompson. He has already accumulated a good amount of reserve time in his remaining two games, and the very purpose of giving reserve time is to give a player the freedom to stop playing when emergency situations like this arise.
The first round is now down to two unfinished games. So odds are good that the second round will be starting sometime this month. I plan to focus this second round on the variants that are most likely to take longest to play. These would be the large variants plus Chessgi, because its drops may extend the duration of the game. By grouping these games together in the second round, it should help the third round go more quickly.
Fergus, I doubt the second round is going to begin at the end of this month, The game of Kamikaze Mortal Shogi that are playing Michael Howe and Ben Good may last many moves more, probably, and it is possible it is not going to finish as soon as you think.
If Ben and the two players of the other ongoing game agree, then I will start the second round before the first round ends.
Well, Ben would rather wait till the first round ends. I think Ben and Michael are playing an interesting game of Kamikaze Mortal Shogi, and in my opinion both are good players, so, very probably, this game is not going to be finished soon!. It means that the second round must wait...
Michael Howe has quit the tournament. The most straightforward way of proceeding would be to declare him the loser in all his remaining games without anyone actually playing any of them. It seems that this option may give an unfair advantage to anyone who hasn't played him yet, though, since he has won only one game, this would materially affect the score of only one player. A second option would be to not count any of his games toward scoring. This would put everyone on a level playing field against each other. It would also set a precedent of doing the same for anyone else who quits. It may seem innocuous right now, given that doing it right now would make a material difference for only one player, but if someone else quit after playing more games, it might not seem like such a fair thing to do. I think that some of the unfairness in the first option may be mitigated by the following consideration. It gives people who haven't yet played against Michael Howe the option of playing the game they were scheduled to play with him against someone else who has already won the game in this tournament. Although someone who has beaten him at a game will have to play and win one more game to score just as well as someone who hasn't played against him, someone who has beaten him has better odds of being the better player for the particular game he has beaten him at. Whichever option we go with, there is also the possibility of reassigning some games before we continue. This may be desirable for those who were assigned to play Michael Howe for one of their top choices. If you haven't played Michael Howe yet, and you're interested in a reassignment of your remaining games, please contact me with the change you would like made.
I would be the only person Michael Howe has beaten, and so I think that means I'm the only person who would theoretically be disadvantaged by Fergus's first alternative. So let me remark, for the sake of making the decision easier, that I have no objection to Fergus's first alternative. I'm trying to win my games, of course, or at least to draw, but I'm in the tournament for fun.
Fergus, I'm confused by the third paragraph of your latest comment. Are you proposing a third alternative or merely suggesting some games that could be played outside the tournament?
The third paragraph in my last comment describes an application of the provision I included in the first paragraph under 'Pairings', which reads 'If any two players both win the same game against other opponents, and they have not played each other yet, they may choose to play that game together instead of what they were previously scheduled to play.' Since I have decided to go with the first option, anyone who has not yet played against Michael Howe is considered to have won his game against him without playing it.
I have just finished assigning all the games for the second round of the tournament. Because some people are playing only three games this round, not everyone is moving first exactly twice and second exactly twice. Here is how I determined who would go first in each game. First, I arranged it so that whoever had won fewer games would go first. I then applied the following rule: No one could move first in more than two games, and no one could move second in more than two games. This involved switching the order of some opponents in a way that worked out consistently for everyone. As much as possible, any discrepencies will be made up in the last round, so that each player moves first and second in an equal number of games. I got preferences for Kamikaze Mortal Shogi graphics from one player for each scheduled game. My opponent shared my own preferences, but for the other three games, only one player apiece gave preferences. So those are the ones I went with. All games but Maxima are being played with presets that enforce the rules. It is fitting that Antoine is playing the only game of Takeover Chess in this round, since he wrote the code for enforcing the rules of this game. If there are any bugs in the Takeover Chess preset, it will normally be his responsibility to fix them, not mine. But it would be best to contact both of us about any bugs in that preset, since a given bug might be in Game Courier's code instead of in Antoine's.
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