First of all, thank you for your reply (and explanations). I have a few comments (and a couple of questions).
smerriman, on 2024-May-26, 02:48, said:
But double dummy robots tend to perform better than ones which blindly follow rules like "always lead partner's suit" or "always lead 4th highest from your longest / strongest suit", so this is something you generally have to put up with.
Bridge represents the ultimate game of imperfect information. Good players don't blindly follow rules, but usually don't break them without a good reason.
smerriman, on 2024-May-26, 02:48, said:
GIB, for a bizarre reason, has been told that the standard lead from JT8x is fourth highest, not the J (but J is correct from a suit headed KJTx).
UGH!
smerriman, on 2024-May-26, 02:48, said:
West's logic is that if East has led from a 4+ card suit, it must be headed KJT, and thus ducking is clearly correct. If East
has lead from a 2 or 3 card suit, then North with their 9 major cards has at most a singleton diamond, and the diamond suit isn't running, so it doesn't cost to duck.
But shouldn't the Robot take into consideration that his partner
might have led from JT8x? If East would absolutely never do that, then ducking makes some (a small amount) of sense. While I appreciate your comment about not trusting opposition bidding (I have seen humans make some, let me say "strange" bids in the duplicate IMPs, that work out incredibly well a surprising percentage of the time), I think that in this case, East doesn't have "room" for the CK (I would at least trust the opposition Robot bidding somewhat). It also appears that the Robot doesn't take the cost of errors into account. Playing the CA when partner has the CK will cost an overtrick, but ducking when declarer has the CK will likely give away a vulnerable game at IMPs (and those diamonds in dummy certainly do appear threatening). A human would obviously weigh the probability that partner led from JT8X versus from KJTx, as well as consider the consequences of making the "wrong" play in each case.
smerriman, on 2024-May-26, 02:48, said:
3♣ is described as natural with biddable clubs!? And 3NT is described as extra values (15-17) and a "partial stop in clubs".. that point range is completely impossible to begin with. But anyway, it trusts inferences from its partner more that it trusts the opposition's bidding.
I had four of them, did't I?
And (very modest) extra values.
I have started to accept that (similar to playing with humans) that sometimes the Robot will hand me a huge gift (defensive error), and sometimes it will hand those gifts out to other people playing the same hand. I have also begun to take amusement from bamboozling the Robot, and while not particularly relevant to this topic, I have a humorous example of that. I arrived in an absolutely hopeless 3NT contract, and an early defensive error by the Robot got me up to eight tricks. I (South) had
♣AQT98 in my hand opposite
♣65 in dummy. The bidding indicated that West held the club honors, so I led the C8 from my hand, which held when Robot failed to cover (my ninth trick).
So let me move on to my question - does the Robot do these simulations in real time (and how does it do it?)? It really surprised me (the first time I saw it) that the Robot will take different actions (at least in defense and declarer play) in absolutely identical circumstances. This hand occurred during one of my first few sessions in IMPs, and I had written it up meaning to make it my first post (as a question), but will include it here.
Initially, I gave myself too much credit for good defense (and learned the truth after I reviewed what happened at the other tables).
Let me take care of the two oddities first. At one table, South overcalled the 1H opening bid with 3C (holding
♣AQJ98), which "worked," as (after a negative double by W) East bid 3NT (West didn't pull), and that failed by three tricks (+10.6 IMPs). At another table, South raised to 3D, and then to 5D over 4S. That didn't work, as West doubled, and suboptimal play led to a three-trick set.
At the other fourteen tables, West played 4S (doubled at two tables), making at every table except for mine. Ten times the bidding proceeded as shown in the diagram. At one table South bid 3D over the support double, at one table South bid 3C over the support double, and at two tables, South overcalled 2C directly, leading to this auction:
W N E S
1H 2C
2S 3D P P
4S X P P
P
I hadn't realized before that the Robot can chose different actions (at different tables) in identical circumstances.
At one table in 4SX, the robot led the DA, and at the other table (same auction), the Robot led the CT.
At the table where South bid 3C over the support double, the robot led the C3 (I don't know why not the CT). At the table where South raised diamonds over the support double, the robot made the odd (and very unsuccessful) lead of the HA.
Finally, at the ten tables with identical auctions, the robot led the CT nine times. South took two clubs, and then shifted to a diamond (seven times), continued clubs (once), or shifted to a spade (once - the correct play, but a trick too late). For some reason I can't figure out, at my table, the robot led the S8, an absolutely devastating lead (but it still required the defense not to slip up in subsequent play). Declarer won in dummy and ruffed a heart, which revealed the heart position to me at trick two. The Souths at the other tables didn't know that declarer had absolutely no chance of setting up the hearts. When declarer played a club to the king at trick three, I won, and returned a second trump, also won in dummy. Declarer ruffed another heart, and then led a diamond towards dummy. Partner won the ace, and played his second club, which I overtook. I then played my third trump, and with no club ruffs available, the contract failed by two tricks. While I thought that would score well, the result exceeded my expectation (+10.3 IMPs). It turns out though, that I hadn't really done anything brilliant at all. The robot set up the defense with the trump opening lead, and I strongly suspect that had I received the lead of the CT (which occurred at all of the other tables with the same auction), I would not have found the necessary spade shift at trick two, which could still have beaten the contract one trick.
Anyway, I have since seen many cases where the Robot will make a different lead or card play at different tables in identical situations, which frequently leads to large swings, and I just wonder why that happens.
Anyway, thanks again for your reply, and I will read the posts in your signature.