barmar, on 2012-April-11, 21:06, said:
The book bid with North's hand is actually 5♣. With the strength you've shown, it thinks you should be in game, so the question is just which suit. His hand is worthless as a dummy in ♦, but if he can take some trump tricks then your powerhouse should take care of the rest. The rule says to bid the longest suit.
But then it ran simulations. In its simulations, it's having a hard time finding hands that fit the bidding. It ended up with quite a few hands where your hearts are AKx or AKxx, so 4♥ seemed like a better place than 5♣. In many cases, the opponents took the push to 4♠, and then it expected you to make a forcing pass, and it will then double when it comes around again, and they go for a number.
That is all nice and logical, just as you would expect a computer program to be, but can we adjust something so that it doesn't make such a silly bid?
Some obvious issues.
1. South can't have 4
♥, he didn't double.
2. While the hand might be described as 25 points if the intent was to make, a part score or game sac here might be considered by some. It is far more likely south has a very distributional 20 total point hand.
3. Even if the hand is described as 25 points, it is clearly not hcp and blindly pulling partners 25 total point diamond hand into an unsupported 4 card major is not good bridge.
I think stephen tu suggested in another thread that any hand that gets described as 25+ total points is suspect. The gib robot bidding goes off the rails, bearing little resemblance to what a human would do and fairly universally wrong as the cards lie.
The majority of human players got this one wrong and I would wager that of those that got this one right, most got it right only because they knew the gib robot would screw it up and declined to make the normal bid.
Sure I can learn to adapt to the gib robot, but is that what we really want people to do? Can't we also improve the gib robot?