barmar, on 2025-March-05, 15:02, said:
I agree with this. I also think most players have never read the Laws.
In general, people don't learn games by reading the rules, they learn by osmosis from other players.
In general, people don't learn games by reading the rules, they learn by osmosis from other players.
And as you pointed out earlier, the majority of players in North America want a simple version of the game.
barmar, on 2025-February-27, 16:45, said:
The impression I get is that the ACBL regulators believe that American players don't want comprehensive, detailed regulations like the colored books. They probably consider them too overwhelming and no one will read them.
ACBL regulations have generally been based more on establishing some general principles, and then applying them to specific cases. The problem has been that these principles are sometimes too vague; they made some improvements in the revisions of the convention charts and alert procedures a few years ago. But the general idea of keeping them short and general instead of long and detailed is still there.
I'm not sure they're wrong about what the majority of ACBL members want.
ACBL regulations have generally been based more on establishing some general principles, and then applying them to specific cases. The problem has been that these principles are sometimes too vague; they made some improvements in the revisions of the convention charts and alert procedures a few years ago. But the general idea of keeping them short and general instead of long and detailed is still there.
I'm not sure they're wrong about what the majority of ACBL members want.