tmgrl4 Posted March 25, 2010 Report Share Posted March 25, 2010 That's what I thought, too. Except for duplicates, others are different hands. At least once in awhile, I place in the non-duplicates...the pointers here should help too. The GIB has a lot of benefits to a novice, in that I am beginning to recognize conventions that were only names before. Down-side is that it is 2/1 and I am working on SAYC...building my way into that. Have only played bridge for seven months..retirement treat to myself and I play it all here! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
barmar Posted March 26, 2010 Report Share Posted March 26, 2010 Yes, it's RKCB, with 3014 responses. You can read the robot's CC here: http://www.bridgebase.com/doc/gib_system_notes.php Although SAYC is the popular system for pick-up partnerships on BBO, in the real world 2/1 is probably more popular (it's the most common system among tournament players in the US). So it would be a good idea to learn it, and playing with GIB should help. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gwnn Posted April 18, 2010 Report Share Posted April 18, 2010 Nowadays my results have been going bad, I am barely breaking even, if at all. I've been wondering if it's because of my opening style being too strict: -only open 1M if I can (comfortably) bid game over 2M.-only open 1m if I can (comfortably) reverse/jump rebid over partner's 1 level response.(i.e. never open 1NT) The result is that of course I have a higher chance of getting good hands but also that GIB's open in front of me etc. Do you think I'm too strict? What are your favourite requirements at the moment? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cherdanno Posted April 18, 2010 Report Share Posted April 18, 2010 Nowadays my results have been going bad, I am barely breaking even, if at all. I've been wondering if it's because of my opening style being too strict: -only open 1M if I can (comfortably) bid game over 2M.-only open 1m if I can (comfortably) reverse/jump rebid over partner's 1 level response.(i.e. never open 1NT) The result is that of course I have a higher chance of getting good hands but also that GIB's open in front of me etc. Do you think I'm too strict? What are your favourite requirements at the moment? I never open 1NT. However, when you have a major suit AND you can invite opposite any rebid AND you are vulnerable then I think it must be right to open. It may still be right non-vulnerable. (You should clearly open more frequently when you are vulnerable, and when you have the majors - your rules don't seem to reflect that.) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gwnn Posted April 18, 2010 Report Share Posted April 18, 2010 are you talking about 1M.. 2N rebids? not clear what you mean. If so, of course I open them too Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cherdanno Posted April 19, 2010 Report Share Posted April 19, 2010 are you talking about 1M.. 2N rebids? not clear what you mean. If so, of course I open them too Also invites after 1M-2M. Or hands that bid 1S 1N 2x 2S 3x. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
allfail Posted April 20, 2010 Report Share Posted April 20, 2010 I think I open my suit openings are similar to yours. I think invitational openings are not necessary under all vulnerabilities (at least for me) since I don't like to play edgy contract and spend a lot of time or end in a partial. For those better hands partner would also open if you didn't. However, I don't know about 1NT. My rule has always been open all 16+ if vulnerable. So if a hand does not fit in your previous description yet has more than 16 pts I would open 1NT. This includes 5M332, 5M4m22.. etc. Nonvul I would do the same first/2nd seat, but more depending on my mood. I think it is a good thing to discuss whether one should open 1NT in best hands. The downside is of course, being leaving out in a partial or being heavily penalized. The plus side is to reach game, with the bonus that GiB sometimes misdefends if you bid 1NT with 5 of a major. In my personal experience, I think ~1/2 or maybe more of the hands would reach game if you open 1NT 1st/2nd seat. The other half you would land in a partial, and the score is often small and can be played reasonably quick. It is very unlikely to go down a lot or being doubled unless opponents have game. In this case either way you are going to be negative. To sum up, I think having a 1nt hand 1st/2nd seat can score 200-300 in average if you open and is slightly too good to miss. Also, maybe the most decisive factor is that if you don't open and opps do, you are in a horrible situation since you cannot compete for the contract and they tend to play in a partial horribly slow. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rain Posted July 4, 2010 Report Share Posted July 4, 2010 An eureka moment was when I realised robot evaluate points DIFFERENTLY, but in a set way. http://online.bridgebase.com/doc/gib_system_notes.php HCP vs Total Points Gib uses both old fashioned HCP (A=4,K=3,Q=2,J=1)) and “Total points” (HCP+3 for void, 2 for singleton, 1 for doubleton). It sometimes uses “8421” points when cuebidding (A=8,K=4,Q=2,J=1). It will usually force to game if it thinks it has 25 Total Points between the two hands. This is huge, I think. Makes the alerts much more understandable! And generally implies I need to underbid a little to compensate for steroid bot. -----------------------------New thing in the duplicates: Passing out 12-15 hands like in robot rewards doesn't score as well, but preempting with these seem to work well. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Scoti Posted July 6, 2010 Report Share Posted July 6, 2010 3) If GIB can play the hand, it always plays the hand faster and better than you do. So if you can manoeuvre this, nothing like it.Wow really?? Can my Robo's get some lessons from yours!? Seriously, they are not only slower (which I am gathering may be my connection speed) but Robo-P will always manage to overbid one trick. If it happens to find a correct bid, finds a way to lose a trick. My last hand the bidding went something like: 1!s P 2!h P, 3!c P 3!h P, 4!d P 4!h P, P(I give up) P I had a big hand for anything but my heart void. P reveals his hand, 5 hearts with 10 high & the rest under 8. Lol & cry . . . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AceOfHeart Posted July 23, 2010 Report Share Posted July 23, 2010 3) If GIB can play the hand, it always plays the hand faster and better than you do. So if you can manoeuvre this, nothing like it.Wow really?? Can my Robo's get some lessons from yours!? Seriously, they are not only slower (which I am gathering may be my connection speed) but Robo-P will always manage to overbid one trick. If it happens to find a correct bid, finds a way to lose a trick. My last hand the bidding went something like: 1!s P 2!h P, 3!c P 3!h P, 4!d P 4!h P, P(I give up) P I had a big hand for anything but my heart void. P reveals his hand, 5 hearts with 10 high & the rest under 8. Lol & cry . . . Robot play faster in almost all circumstances. The fastest i see a robot declare a hand is <5 seconds. They tend to play slower if the contract is low since there is almost many possibility. But once you reach a contract with only 1 line of play or with all cashing tricks, Gib does that with blazing speed. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
barmar Posted July 23, 2010 Report Share Posted July 23, 2010 Robot play faster in almost all circumstances. The fastest i see a robot declare a hand is <5 seconds. They tend to play slower if the contract is low since there is almost many possibility. But once you reach a contract with only 1 line of play or with all cashing tricks, Gib does that with blazing speed. I've hardly ever seen it play that fast in a tourney, but in the MBC hands frequently go so quickly you can't see what's happening. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cloa513 Posted July 24, 2010 Report Share Posted July 24, 2010 3) If GIB can play the hand, it always plays the hand faster and better than you do. So if you can manoeuvre this, nothing like it.Wow really?? Can my Robo's get some lessons from yours!? Seriously, they are not only slower (which I am gathering may be my connection speed) but Robo-P will always manage to overbid one trick. If it happens to find a correct bid, finds a way to lose a trick. My last hand the bidding went something like: 1!s P 2!h P, 3!c P 3!h P, 4!d P 4!h P, P(I give up) P I had a big hand for anything but my heart void. P reveals his hand, 5 hearts with 10 high & the rest under 8. Lol & cry . . . So why didn't you try 3NT after 3H. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AceOfHeart Posted July 24, 2010 Report Share Posted July 24, 2010 Robot play faster in almost all circumstances. The fastest i see a robot declare a hand is <5 seconds. They tend to play slower if the contract is low since there is almost many possibility. But once you reach a contract with only 1 line of play or with all cashing tricks, Gib does that with blazing speed. I've hardly ever seen it play that fast in a tourney, but in the MBC hands frequently go so quickly you can't see what's happening. use web client, the web client play much faster than the windows client. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
barmar Posted July 27, 2010 Report Share Posted July 27, 2010 I only use the web client. I think tourneys are the same in both clients, since they always run the robot on a server. In the Windows client, MBC bots run on your PC, and you can set the speed. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jamegumb Posted August 23, 2010 Report Share Posted August 23, 2010 1) GIB sucks at Moysian fits. (Always remember SJ Simon's line, "The best result possible. Not the best possible result.") 2) GIB covers honors much more than it should. Same with playing high from 3rd position. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
barmar Posted August 25, 2010 Report Share Posted August 25, 2010 It probably pops aces in 2nd chair more than it should, too. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jamegumb Posted August 25, 2010 Report Share Posted August 25, 2010 Oh, and can it keep from bidding a Kxxxxx suit three times? When I set a 3NT contract, it's because I know how lousy your rebids can be. Don't take me out into your major. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jamegumb Posted August 25, 2010 Report Share Posted August 25, 2010 And I'm reading here about people playing 30+ hands. Isn't there a 25-hand limit to Robot Reward tournaments? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
barmar Posted August 26, 2010 Report Share Posted August 26, 2010 I don't think there's a limit to robot rewards tourneys. The signup screen says 25 boards, but that's because the software needs a number to be put there. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TimG Posted August 26, 2010 Report Share Posted August 26, 2010 And I'm reading here about people playing 30+ hands. Isn't there a 25-hand limit to Robot Reward tournaments? I've gone over 25 hands plenty of times. Probably average over 25 hands. (Actually, 24 1/2.) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jamegumb Posted September 17, 2010 Report Share Posted September 17, 2010 Finally scored above 10,000 (actually topped 11 as well). Still not quite sure what to open with 18-19 points and no five card major or four card minor. Seeing 1D passed out on those hands is depressing. BTW, I think it's flawed to announce the tournament as 25 hands when the hands are actually unlimited. This was influencing my strategy before I found out better. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
barmar Posted September 18, 2010 Report Share Posted September 18, 2010 With 4=4=3=2, the system bid is 1♦. Last night I managed to make it (with an overtrick, I think) holding QTx opposite xxx. But we'd undoubtedly have done better playing in GIB's ♠QJxxx, since I held AKxx there. I don't recommend upgrading it to 2NT. GIB has put me in many difficult 3NT's when I had a real 2NT opener. Then again, in total points the game bonus makes it worthwhile to bid the sketchiest games. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
fly_tier Posted November 4, 2010 Report Share Posted November 4, 2010 What special strategies do you use in robot race tournaments (if you play them)? How fast do you play, i.e. how many hands do you typically get to finish in the 25 minutes?Anything special to handle the GIBs? Do you watch the leaderboard a lot? Personally I think the whole thing is a fiddle. The robots seem to bid and play a different game between match point and money prizes. Can someone explain to me why it is that as my first hand is dealt the name and points of someone is going up on the leader board, why as the very last 4 cards of a hand are played you wait for ages whilst the robots play (time wasting?) and why in a recent comp did my robot ruff my ace, east and west followed suit and then when I get in again and play the same suit east and west following my robot has no trumps left so the ops make their game instead of going one down. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
barmar Posted November 5, 2010 Report Share Posted November 5, 2010 In Robot Race/Reward tournaments, many hands that would be opened in "normal" bridge get passed out. I've taken to not opening any hands where I'm not vulnerable, and I doubt I'm alone. Since board 1 is always none vul, many of them get passed out quickly, which is why you see results going up on the leader board so soon. As for why it ruffed your ace, that's hard to say without seeing the hand. It must have done a simulation that found that it needed to get on lead right away. There sometimes are hands where it's necessary to trump partner's winner for communication, or to avoid an end-play. Just because it didn't work doesn't mean it wasn't the right thing to do with the information it had. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
fly_tier Posted November 11, 2010 Report Share Posted November 11, 2010 In Robot Race/Reward tournaments, many hands that would be opened in "normal" bridge get passed out. I've taken to not opening any hands where I'm not vulnerable, and I doubt I'm alone. Since board 1 is always none vul, many of them get passed out quickly, which is why you see results going up on the leader board so soon. As for why it ruffed your ace, that's hard to say without seeing the hand. It must have done a simulation that found that it needed to get on lead right away. There sometimes are hands where it's necessary to trump partner's winner for communication, or to avoid an end-play. Just because it didn't work doesn't mean it wasn't the right thing to do with the information it had. It has been explained to me by B.B.O. that in robot race/reward comps we are dealt different board anyway, hence you can see point's for a slam going up as you are trying to make a part score and this explains why, when you feel you have played well and put a 1000pts up, someone else puts 6000pts up. The other day I played in a match point comp where my robot refused twice to ruff there winning trick, they then drew trumps, it had 3 trumps small ones so no trump promotion and they made there contract, the robots all played at a fast pace. I then played in a reward comp where the pace of play slows to a crawl, so much so that in the last hand I am about to make a slam, the last cards are played to my ace and the last robot took nearly 1 minute to play (I timed it) and the overall time runs out before he can do so, thereby making that hand void and I lose the points and money. I think its a racket. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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