Concentrate on playing your hands well and not making speculative leads unless the bidding has revealed a likely flaw. Expect hands to be very distributional when the robots seem to make a miraculous lead. Cater to the weird mistakes robots make when you wind up in a poor contract. Practice. practice, practice especially on defense where you can often make a bundle of matchpoints by properly timing the leads between you and robot- they do not pay much attention to count and attitude unless you clearly hit the weakness early. You may want to underbid any time the two hands have lots of high cards but no very good fit, especially in part score hands. Remember if given a choice plus scores are most important, but consider taking a dangerous finesse when it just feels right as other players will do the same. Of course, know the way tournaments are scored: you get half a point for each player you tie and 1 point for each you beat and that gets turned into a percentage of the possible points you could have made. Expect to have rounds where it seems everything goes wrong and you get a pour score: go back and pull the hand records and see if you can find a logically better line. "As we say in my law Office, some days you are the statue and some days you are the pigeon."