PhilG007, on 2018-May-23, 09:29, said:
OK what length then? You decide but 64 is too long.. And as for "getting lucky" there's no such thing Bridge is a game of skill. Its all about ability
Well you were the one that objected to 64, state the longest you are willing to do. The software allows 16 at a time, in my experience the biggest lag is in just setting up the challenge and the other person playing the boards, not the number of boards each set (not huge difference playing 16 boards vs. 12, as one can play a board quickly against bots). So 48? 32?
I'd also want to use the advanced bots, I can set up the challenges if you wish.
Bridge is a game of skill in the long run, but there is still a significant amount of luck in short matches. For instance, a single board may hinge on a two-way guess for a finesse, where there is no clue from the bidding or the play, and one player may simply guess the board better. Or one player sets up a clever endplay to avoid the 2-way guess altogether, showing superior skill, but the other player ties the board by simply guessing right. There are hands where the superior line unluckily loses to an inferior line to due to the lie of the cards. Or you bid a 75% slam your opponent doesn't, but this happens to be the 25% of the time it goes down. Or bot does something silly in the bidding or play and screws one player or the other. The longer the match, the more instances like these will tend to even out and revert to the mean, leaving skill as the determining factor. But in a short match, a couple of lucky results and a string of flat boards can let a lucky player win.
In a long match I, playing with my peers, have close to zero chance against some subset combo of our local world class players Martel/Woolsey/Stansbys/Rosenbergs. I'm usually going to get clobbered over 60+ boards. But over only 8 boards, I am going to win the match a decent measurable chunk of the time, and have.