tomatoshooter
Well-known member
That's why it's so interesting! Someone said sports are popular because it give the average person a chance to have theories. Of course if I had been practicing instead of reading this thread, I could have improved enough to negate any difference from break format.Which is why the psychological stuff might be interesting, but it's more or less impossible to make any rational conclusions from the musings.
I would guess that the human variables would be different for the humans, and individual enough that, unlike game format, studying them on a population level would eliminate any useful knowledge. Take four mediocre players and match them up against someone 200 Fargos higher. Player A gets intimidated and plays poorly, getting blown off the table. Player B decides he's going to be ultra focused and is too tight, losing badly. Player C decides to summon all his strength and focus and plays a very strong game, possibly even getting a couple of good rolls and winning. Player D realizes he's outclassed and has no chance, freeing his mind of all thought and stress, staying loose and playing a very competitive game. Or finding himself on the hill, tightens up and loses.So far as I know, there is no sound theory that includes the human variables. It can be fun to speculate, though.
We have different outcomes for different reasons and different paths for our players to improve. For that matter most of us have been all of these players at one point or another. I feel like these need to be studied as individual events. When studying tournament format, a tournament is, almost by definition, a population study, and studying on too close of a level will yield less useful information.