Why do you suck at bridge?
#121
Posted 2011-September-21, 11:21
1. A very good local Texas player named Imogene Hawes once told me "you have to try hard, but be careful and not try too hard." In sports you burn up the extra adreneline, but bridge is sedentary, and you can easily over amp.
2. Second, don't accept bidding lessons from your peers. If you have questions, try and get your advice from people named Jacoby, Lall and the like.
#122
Posted 2011-September-21, 22:51
#123
Posted 2011-September-21, 22:58
Antrax, on 2011-September-21, 22:51, said:
I don't really know how to answer this. In the world of games, then I'd say that expert bridge is considerably more difficult than expert almost anything else, especially if limited to card and board games. I have never played go but from what I have heard expert go is significantly harder than expert bridge, so I'm not saying that bridge is the hardest of all of that group or anything.
If you were trying to ask something else and I didn't get it please let me know.
#125
Posted 2011-September-22, 03:34
Antrax, on 2011-September-21, 22:51, said:
Having played both to a decent level (although not to Justin's standard) I must say I found high level chess much more difficult (and time consuming in preparation) than bridge which is why I now only play bridge.
Why ? Well the bridge analysis tree only goes 13 moves deep, chess ones can easily go 25 moves or more, sometimes with 5 or 6 choices at the start.
#126
Posted 2011-September-22, 04:48
#127
Posted 2011-September-22, 05:03
#128
Posted 2011-September-22, 05:28
Cyberyeti, on 2011-September-22, 03:34, said:
Why ? Well the bridge analysis tree only goes 13 moves deep, chess ones can easily go 25 moves or more, sometimes with 5 or 6 choices at the start.
Only 25 moves? I played a league game that went well over 30 moves in book theory to a superior endgame, and my rating was only 135 or so. You could think of preparing the bidding system and carding as the equivalent of this chess preparation. If you are willing to put in as much time as for chess then perhaps you end up with a comprehensive expert-level method. Also, if you choose to play only a very limited chess opening repertoire then it cuts down on the amount of preparation enourmously, but in return you have to know that repertoire to a very high level since you have made yourself very easy to prepare against. This was the approach I took and there were many, for example, Dragon lines which I could quote to move 30 or beyond. Perhaps this is the equivalent of learning a relay system 30 bids deep.
However, the evidence imho suggests that to play chess at the highest level is more difficult than bridge. If you are not a high class chess player by age 13, say, then you have almost no chance whatsoever of becoming a GM. The brain actually reprograms itself to use the face-recognition part as a chess pattern recognition center. This should make the decision on whether to concentrate on chess or bridge very simple for anyone looking to reach a high level. In bridge there are examples of players that have reached a world class level having started playing much later in years. I do not have enough knowledge to compare either with Go. However, anyone who has played MtG will know that the suggestion of its complexity being in the same ball-park is laughable. I suspect it was made tongue-in-cheek to make some point or other.
#129
Posted 2011-September-22, 05:29
Antrax, on 2011-September-22, 05:03, said:
This seems like a logic fail. I did not say the way to measure which game is the hardest is by how well computers play relative to humans.
I said that humans clearly suck at chess. Good evidence of this is by seeing how the best humans are so much worse than the best computers.
I also said that people suck at bridge.
#130
Posted 2011-September-22, 05:43
Most likelly is that if they are able to come to hearth they can teach chess to a 5 year old kid and he happily beats all the masters he finds
#131
Posted 2011-September-22, 05:48
Zelandakh, on 2011-September-22, 05:28, said:
However, the evidence imho suggests that to play chess at the highest level is more difficult than bridge. If you are not a high class chess player by age 13, say, then you have almost no chance whatsoever of becoming a GM. The brain actually reprograms itself to use the face-recognition part as a chess pattern recognition center. This should make the decision on whether to concentrate on chess or bridge very simple for anyone looking to reach a high level. In bridge there are examples of players that have reached a world class level having started playing much later in years. I do not have enough knowledge to compare either with Go. However, anyone who has played MtG will know that the suggestion of its complexity being in the same ball-park is laughable. I suspect it was made tongue-in-cheek to make some point or other.
Why is this evidence of playing chess at the highest level being more difficult than bridge? I submit that extremely young people are not capable of playing bridge because their brains are not developed enough at things that are necessary to be a top bridge player. Bidding judgement, taking inference from the opponents actions, etc are too hard for someone that young. You also need more experience for bridge, because you see so many different situations/patterns than you do in chess, and it's hard to get enough useful experience when you are that young.
I believe that your processing speed/abilities are probably going to be best as a late teen. I could definitely crunch the numbers faster and better, and think clearer when I was younger. That kind of processing ability being at or near its height is much more important in chess than bridge.
Bob Hamman once told me he thought a bridge players peak is probably around 40. This is the best combination of acquiring the right amount of judgement/experience while also having high processing abilities, as well as physical ability (being able to concentrate for a long time). It's possible that it's younger because younger players can get more experience now playing online faster, but I'd be surprised if it was earlier than your earlier 30s. I'm sure it's younger in chess because the price you pay in your processing ability is more costly in chess for the trade offs.
Of course the counter argument to this is we've never seen what young people can really do, because far more young people dedicate themselves to chess than bridge, by a large amount. I could be wrong, but I believe that while very young people would be capable of playing the cards at an elite level, they would be incapable of bidding at an extremely high level. Bidding is just so much more about things that a more mature brain is going to be better at, on top of the enormous amount of knowledge and experience necessary.
Also, I am biased. I will immodestly say (not to brag) that I was very likely one of the best 2 13 year old players ever. And again, I'm sure this is because I was one of the few people who got heavily into it so young, it's easy to beat a small pool of people. My cardplay then was very good, and my bidding was not. I did not focus on bridge full time though, I went to school, but I do believe no matter what that I was not capable of being an elite bidder at that level. My cardplay was not elite, just quite good, but I believe that had I been a hardcore dedicated person like some of the chess people, I would have been able to play my cards at a near elite level. Still, I'm not sure if I would have been able to process all possible inference well enough. The parts of cardplay that are like chess though, definitely a kid could be great at that, like solving double dummy problems, endgames, etc.
My main point was that both games are very hard though, and despite both games having dedicated people, people suck at both games. I find it hard to believe that this is debatable. I never meant to imply that only in bridge did everyone suck as far as games go.
Comparing incomplete information games to perfect information games is really hard, and depending on your priorities you can reasonably judge either game as harder obv, it's subjective.
#132
Posted 2011-September-22, 06:59
Zelandakh, on 2011-September-22, 05:28, said:
However, the evidence imho suggests that to play chess at the highest level is more difficult than bridge. If you are not a high class chess player by age 13, say, then you have almost no chance whatsoever of becoming a GM. The brain actually reprograms itself to use the face-recognition part as a chess pattern recognition center. This should make the decision on whether to concentrate on chess or bridge very simple for anyone looking to reach a high level. In bridge there are examples of players that have reached a world class level having started playing much later in years. I do not have enough knowledge to compare either with Go. However, anyone who has played MtG will know that the suggestion of its complexity being in the same ball-park is laughable. I suspect it was made tongue-in-cheek to make some point or other.
I did say 25 or more, Lopez and queens gambit can get to 40 I think. I deliberately used to play an opening repertoire that didn't go that long (morra v the sicilian for example, Polugayevsky sicilian before it was busted) to attempt to get into a tactical mess in the middle game which is where I was strong. I played most of time around 140 but had a year spread across 2 seasons where I was 180+ and regularly knocking off 200+ people at blitz. To do that required at least 3 hours chess a night and is probably the major reason I failed my degree.
MtG (maybe I should come out of the closet as the first mindsports olympiad MtG gold medallist) is a complex game in the deckbuilding and testing, but much less so in the play most of the time.
#133
Posted 2011-September-22, 07:04
JLOGIC, on 2011-September-21, 22:58, said:
I encourage you to give it a try, even if only recreationally. I find it fun, challenging, and rewarding. Best of all, it relies the least on memorization, compared to chess (opening theory) and bridge (bidding systems).
I have played both go and bridge to a modest level of competence, but I cannot easily say which is more difficult to become expert at. Perhaps the problem is that I am not expert myself. All I can say for sure, is that both have more than enough difficulty and variety for a lifetime of study and enjoyment, while never running out of room to improve.
-gwnn
#134
Posted 2011-September-22, 07:18
#135
Posted 2011-September-22, 07:54
And @Cyber, yes, critical lines of the Marshall especially are making move 40 with book theory beyond that. As for the Morra, bleurgh, good in blitz but I found it incredibly drawish in proper play.
Justin's point that bridge players mature slower is well made but I strongly suspect if you took a child and trained them with hours of bridge card-play every day that they would be likely to also start modifying their biology in the way chess players do. If there were millions (cash) in bridge the way there are in, say, American football then I am sure this would have been done by now. There are also more chess players and therefore from a maths point of view it makes sense that the top of the game is the more extreme section of the (presumed) underlying normal distribution. When you add to that the fact that you need a database of tens of thousands of games and, depending on your opponent, you need to be aware of the critical points of a large proprtion of the games in that database it is perhaps easier to see the differences. But it is only my opinion and as a non-expert in both games perhaps not my place best to judge.
#136
Posted 2011-September-22, 08:35
I also strongly disagree if you're implying that MtG pros don't make mistakes - clear mistakes have been made up to world championship level. Besides, that's like saying pro chess players never make mistakes in the opening because they prepare so much for it.
#137
Posted 2011-September-22, 09:08
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But I also liked the point of Zelandakh:
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Even though all the information for chess is available (!) and not so in bridge you can learn much by reading and applying that knowledge that exists about not only theory but also practice (which could take the place of the 'experience' Justin argues about) in, for example, the Bridge World. If Cyberyeti expent 3 hours everynight reading the Master Solvers Club part of the magazine I bet his judgement would get at least as good as by playing 72 boards a day.
wyman, on 2012-May-04, 09:48, said:
rbforster, on 2012-May-20, 21:04, said:
My YouTube Channel
#138
Posted 2011-September-22, 09:09
Antrax, on 2011-September-22, 07:18, said:
I agree MtG is a difficult game to teach a computer to play, but it's not so difficult for a human, particularly sealed deck which was the MSO tournament I won (I didn't get amazing power cards, but I did get cards that went together well).
On the chess front, what finally prompted me to give up was reading Kotov's "Think like a grandmaster" and "Grandmaster preparation" which told me how much effort the top players put in and how they thought, and I decided it was going to be too much work for me to improve and I wasn't going that far anyway. I'm not sure whether an equivalent book has really been written (or can be written) for bridge.
Maybe it's just that having played both bridge and chess from an early age (I learned bridge at 8, played my first senior league match at 12 or 13 and won my first adult county trophy at 14) I was always more comfortable with bridge, and crucially, I can play at an adequate standard after a couple of months gap, something I certainly can't do with chess.
#139
Posted 2011-September-22, 09:17
If there is an optimal strategy which humans can learn then you can ask how difficult it is to learn it. But in most activities there will (at least in practice) always be room for improvement. There will always be a certain level to strive for which is infinitely difficult in the sense that nobody will reach it. I think this is true even for silly games like sh**head and "Mensch ärgere dich nicht" although those games have so low S/N ratio that it would take thousands of rounds to distinguish the world class from a mediocre player.
Reaching the top 10% segment of the local bridge club is probably easier than at the local chess club but that is just because more than 90% of the bridge players are not particularly talented/ambitious and learned the game at a mature age. Go is probably even more difficult than chess in this respect.
Reaching the top 1000 worldwide would be very difficult in both games because there are (in absolute numbers) so many talented and ambitious players. It may be slightly easier with Go.
It would be impossible for me to reach the top 10% of the local under-water rugby club but for someone who could do that, reaching the top 1000 worldwide would be within reach.
Chess may feel easier because you can learn the basic rules in an hour and in a few days will have some basic notion of the tactics. Once you have learned Bridge, it may feel easier because there is so much randomness that occasionally you can beat a good pair in a 6-board round of a swiss. But it is really comparing apples to oranges.
Justin's observation about age is spot on I think. For someone who decides to take up one of the two games at the age of 20 and aims to reach the national sup-top, bridge is probably a better choice than chess.
#140
Posted 2011-September-22, 11:58
George Carlin