1) Unlimited access to advanced robots for practice.
2) Ability to invite friends for practise in an environment where other people wouldn't mind while ironed out bugs in our understanding.
3) Ability to try out different approaches on the teaching table using the same advanced robots that I played the hand with in the first place.
It turns out that the advertisement - the basis on which I am paying for my membership - may be inaccurate.
It seems that the teaching table robots in the Prime area behave consistently completely differently to the Advanced robots in the daylongs. Their play appears consistently worse than daylong GIB.
To add insult to injury, rub salt in the wound and really twist the knife; if I try and play and 8 board round in the Prime club, it turns out that much of the time, I might be playing with one iteration of GIB while others are playing against an entirely different iteration of GIB.
The hand shown below was played 16 times.
On the 2 tables where the bidding went 1S-4S and South was a Prime member a ♦4 was led, and the contract makes for +9.2 IMPs.
On the 12 tables where the bidding went 1S-4S and South was not a Prime member, a ♣K was led, and the contract is 4♠-1 for -0.9 IMPs.
Now, when I bring friends - even nice ones - (I know, how can I tell?) onto a Prime table for a few quick practice hands, I first have to explain to them not to worry about the scoring at all because it's meaningless.
Sure, it's a 'nice friendly place' in the sense that no-one in Prime ever (insert whatever here).
Even so, social or not, the Prime Club is still a duplicate Bridge scoring Club.
I'm sure that people who pay for the privilege would prefer it if their bidding and cardplay was compared with other people playing the same GIB.
Even if the hands are NOT always being played in the Prime area. In the example below, only Prime players get the diamond lead. All the non-Primers get a club lead.
It sometimes works to the disadvantage of the Prime players. Either way, it isn't nice, it isn't friendly, and it sucks the fun out of practice.
Can I ask:
1. Are you aware of this issue?
2. Does it matter to BBO?
3. Are there plans to change it?
Here is the advertisement: (28 October 2019)
Quote
BBO Prime is a monthly subscription of $5.99/month offering
- access to a private bridge club only for nice, friendly people,
- free unlimited advanced robots in the Prime Bridge Club
- A monthly tournament (on the 28th of each month) hosted by Aurora with prepared hands (but not if you live in the wrong time zone)
- weekly dedicated daylong (every Saturday)
- daily and weekly bridge articles, and
- now digital version of BeBRIDGE magazine every two months
- a monthly prime bidders challenge conducted by Marc Smith
And finally, the badge! BBO Prime members will have a pretty purple badge in profile (sic).
Everyone else with the same auction gets a ♣K for 4S-1