Bridge dying? will there be enough youth in the future
#121
Posted 2009-December-01, 02:20
Providing a suitable beginners' game is something that BBO is trying to set up, but it is not there yet. My thought is that eventually GIB robots might be programmed to play with different levels of players. A true beginner could play against three such robots or two beginners could match wits with two robots. Post-mortems might even be generated by using advanced GIBs. As players progress, they could play with and against better robots.
Another aspect would be to connect BBO-style "gamers" with the live game. I have not seen any indication that the people who run these two worlds want to interact. This is a shame. Together, they could promote the game more effectively. Who really cares if a bridge player learned to play online or in a supervised play class at the club?
#122
Posted 2009-December-01, 02:39
helene_t, on Nov 30 2009, 09:42 AM, said:
The saint said:
Free said:
Many computer games are very complex, but you typically start at a low level with simple rules, slow tempo, low complexity, weak "opponents" (or enemies or monsters or whatever they are called). As you master the skills for that level you get more challenges.
Bridge could start with declarer play problems with open cards, only two suits, only 6 cards in each hands. Notrump contracts. As you master that level, it will get more complex until you reach realistic declarer play problems. At that stage you could get some hands from real tournaments, and after the hand you could get a video showing Zia bragging about his diabolic deception play. Or, if some of your facebook (or whatever) friends happen to play on BBO you could get some hands that they have played. Possibly annotated with some comments made by your facebook friend (obviously it wouldn't work just to make random chat available but some solution could be found, i.e. players marking comments for their friends and goldstars marking comments for everyone).
You could also start practicing defense before having reached the 52-card level, so that you could play online. Here is how it works: when practicing declarer play, you check "allow humans to defend" and set "time per card" to, say, 7 secs. Anyone could then join your table as a defender, but if they take more than 7 secs to play a card, the computer will make a choice for them using a pretty dump algorithm. This prevents "stalling". Obviously you can chat with the defenders, mark them as friend etc as on bbo. In fact this should be a part of bbo.
I loved these ideas. This program would be great to teach bridge.
wyman, on 2012-May-04, 09:48, said:
rbforster, on 2012-May-20, 21:04, said:
My YouTube Channel
#123
Posted 2009-December-01, 08:58
The biggest bridge bum was when Ely Culbertson created the new bidding system and arranged games to prove his system is better than existed. Pity there was no ACBL that time to restrict the use of new homebrew system of cause for the benefit of the game future and to defend beginners.
#124
Posted 2009-December-01, 10:42
Jlall, on Nov 22 2009, 05:40 AM, said:
Start a new mini-bridge type game on one of the poker sites: get someone like David Sklansky to develop it (he created Carribean Stud Poker, which is quite fun and very profitable for the house so i am sure he could come up with a winner of a game). Getting rid of the bidding is the most important step to making the game popular. Let declarer name the contract as in mini-bridge.
This would be simpler, easier to learn and would be amenable to betting (and since there is no bidding less amenable to cheating, UI etc.) and would require the core skills of bridge to be sucessful.
People who wanted more complexity could graduate to duplicate bridge.
Bill
#125
Posted 2009-December-01, 11:12
In the past, stars like Omar Sharif and John Wayne did much to bring bridge to the "masses", but how many celebs do we know who now play?
Tony
#126
Posted 2009-December-02, 13:34
A simplicity problem - Learning to play bridge is relatively hard. The scoring is difficult to understand, the bidding language is a barrier, and the nuances of cardplay take time to appreciate. By contrast, hold'em can be taught in 1 minute, what hand beats another can fit on the back of a playing card, and the strategy/scoring are seemingly obvious.
A publicity problem - Most people are fundamentally unaware that bridge exists as a 'serious game'. Poker is all over our TV sports networks.
An image problem - Where bridge is known, it is thought of as a stodgy game for the old and elite. "My grandma plays bridge at the senior center every week." And while it is cool that Gates and Buffet play, in some sense they perpetuate the image of the game as 'elite' and 'nerdy'. Poker, on the other hand, has re-invigorated the 'gambler' image and is viewed as thriving/youthful.
The solutions, I think, are obvious, though hardly easy to execute:
1) Figure out appropriate 'gateway' games that build into playing bridge (like Mini-bridge) and find a way to get people playing it. I think a return to 'natural' bidding would help here too - even better if a couple select, highly visible events would get some pros to test skills that way.
2) Bridge needs exposure in the media. Whatever can be done to get some tournaments on TV should be done (again, especially if the bidding complexities can be explained or ignored in the telecast).
3) When bridge is exposed, a broader swath of players needs to be seen. The game needs to work to market the diversity of age and 'lifestyles' of it's players - with particular focus on people the younger generation of players. Their image will go a long way into breathing life into things. Show the old elite, too, but show them at the table with the talented junior in his jeans and wrinkled t-shirt.
#127
Posted 2009-December-03, 14:01
#128
Posted 2009-December-03, 14:36
This is the heart of the matter. Its very hard to convince people to learn basic bidding rules when its so much easier to do/play something else. This type of game is learned if you grow up in a house hold/environment where its played (like school).
This is why I hink a very bare bones (and crappy) system would be good to get people palying the game.
#129
Posted 2009-December-03, 15:01
onoway, on Dec 3 2009, 03:01 PM, said:
Some people take a long time in poker. Just a little editing and no one knows.
#130
Posted 2009-December-03, 17:01
ArcLight, on Dec 3 2009, 10:36 PM, said:
This is the heart of the matter. Its very hard to convince people to learn basic bidding rules when its so much easier to do/play something else. This type of game is learned if you grow up in a house hold/environment where its played (like school).
This is why I hink a very bare bones (and crappy) system would be good to get people palying the game.
You just need a simple score reference table:
[space] [space] [cl] [space] [space][di] [space] [space][he] [space] [space][sp] [space] [space]NT 1 [space] 70 [space] 70 [space] 80 [space] 80 [space] 90 2 [space] 90 [space] 90 [space]110 [space]110 [space]120 3 [space]110 [space]110 [space]140 [space]140 [space]600 .... 7 1440 1440 1510 1510 1520 OT +20 [space]+20 [space]+30 [space]+30 [space]+30
and of course another table for red.
I think this kind of scoring tables should be standard part of beginner course. I could create printable pdf version if anyone wants.
#131
Posted 2009-December-04, 17:51
1) #1 reason I've seen existing players of all ages quit is "I hit LM, and the higher levels seem sort of meaningless". I'm pretty disappointed that the ACBL STILL has all levels after the LM mark be total points/attendance awards only. If they don't feel likely to win a national championship.. there isn't much left for goal oriented people. Video games know this... WoW (most profitable video game I know of in the US) has thousands of milestones for their players to hit. 50+ other milestones that cater to all types of players (lots of gold points, lots of club points, platinum points, etc) should be a no brainer. Instead the ACBL sits around priding themselves on increasing the requirements for the ONE noticeable milestone they have. Blah.
2) A good idea (imo) would be getting bridge recognized by some mathematical accreditation deal for colleges. We've had people try to teach university intermission classes at nearby colleges and the colleges told them to take a hike. Like.. everything is okay for intermission classes here... weaving/baking/singing in a forest, etc. Ping pong is 3 credits but bridge gets laughed at? meh.
3) System - I really really hate being forced to play GCC at the club. I wish I could play midchart stuff at the club (mostly polish club) so I'd be more comfortable playing against it at nationals. I don't think it causes many people to quit though.
4) TV: doable, but edit the snot out of it. Get some good personalities in there (Zia is hilarious!) and cut 64 boards of play down to an hour. Or get Gates and Buffet and 2 other intermediate players to play. Its easier to explain intermediate mistakes/smart things than expert plays.
Movie like Rounders would be awesome, but I'm not sure I see it happening anytime soon.
#132
Posted 2009-December-04, 18:15
Vilgan, on Dec 5 2009, 12:51 AM, said:
For such people, bridge was already dead.
#133
Posted 2009-December-04, 19:42
gnasher, on Dec 4 2009, 07:15 PM, said:
Vilgan, on Dec 5 2009, 12:51 AM, said:
For such people, bridge was already dead.
Poetic statement but not really true imo. You can enjoy/love the game and still be goal oriented. Many people have a variety of interests/loves, and if a better milestone system tilts their interest towards participating in bridge tournaments isn't that a good thing?
#134
Posted 2009-December-05, 19:04
Comments by Ulf Andersson (Chess GM, 58 yrs old in 2009, chess professional since he turned 19)
Inteviewer
"What do you think would be necessary to do in order to make chess as popular a sport as, for example, football or tennis ?
Andersson
I do not consider chess as a sport, what so ever. ... Why would chess be as popular like football or tennis? It is how it is! Just to realise the fact. I like sports a lot. I prefer to look at sports, rather than chess on TV, when there is chess on TV. I prefer to look a game where Barcelona, Real Madrid, Manchester or Chelsea are playing, than to look at a chess game. I would look at a chess games on the professional interest, not for fun!
Source: http://susanpolgar.b...04_archive.html
******************
Personally, I would characterise bridge as an intellectual contest that can bring satisfaction to those who like solving puzzles in a competitive atmosphere. In comparison, sport is primarily a physical contest that can immediately engage the emotions of viewers without necessarily requiring any intellectual involvement. Viewing physical contests surely evokes a more viseral response - one involving our "reptilian brain", that part of our brain concerned with fundamental needs such as survival, dominance, preening and mating.
Do we really think that the puzzle-solving part of our brain can compete with our "reptilian brain" when it comes to spectator interest and involvement?
"Of course wishes everybody to win and play as good as possible, but it is a hobby and a game, not war." 42 (BBO Forums)
"If a man speaks in the forest and there are no women around to hear is he still wrong?" anon
"Politics: an inadequate substitute for bridge." John Maynard Keynes
"This is how Europe works, it dithers, it delays, it makes cowardly small steps towards the truth and at some point that which it has admonished as impossible it embraces as inevitable." Athens University economist Yanis Varoufakis
"Krypt3ia @ Craig, dude, don't even get me started on you. You have posted so far two articles that I and others have found patently clueless. So please, step away from the keyboard before you hurt yourself." Comment on infosecisland.com
"Doing is the real hard part" Emma Coats (formerly from Pixar)
"I was working on the proof of one of my poems all the morning, and took out a comma. In the afternoon I put it back again." Oscar Wilde
"Assessment, far more than religion, has become the opiate of the people" Patricia Broadfoot, Uni of Gloucestershire, UK
#135
Posted 2009-December-05, 19:16
George Carlin
#136
Posted 2009-December-05, 21:10
gwnn, on Dec 5 2009, 08:16 PM, said:
IMO We want more players rather than just spectators.
#137
Posted 2009-December-05, 21:26
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#138
Posted 2009-December-08, 14:41
- Make the second day of the Red Ribbons
- Make the qualifier of the Open two-session pairs game (if you have one, and haven't yet)
- Qualify for NAP/GNT
- Win the second match of the Spingold/Vanderbilt
- Place in Flight A of your regional pairs games/Sunday Swiss
- Never being able to play in Flight B again (unfortunately, they keep changing the flights around here so that I fail at this)
- Endplay/squeeze/get a play compliment from a Name Pro
And then we go to the big ones:
- Place in the RRs
- Make the second day of the LMP/Blue Ribbons
- Make the third day of those events
- Play in your national team qualifiers
- Make it out of the RR of your national team qualifiers
And the real evil one:
- Don't screw up for N hands in a row. When you succeed, increment N and repeat.
Effectively, "do better than you have before." They aren't Achievements that get put in your book for all to see, but you know, the people that count do see them, and do mention it.
#139
Posted 2009-December-08, 18:24
#140
Posted 2009-December-10, 15:36
It is too easy to get to the second day, especially with the 4-into-3 seeding, for it to be in the calibre I wanted; but of course, unless you are playing a 40-25 match or closer, it's probably "story-of-a-lifetime" for non-top-top-flighters.
Thanks for the correction, and well done in SD. Unfortunate, but well done.