Arimaa Forum (http://arimaa.com/arimaa/forum/cgi/YaBB.cgi)
Arimaa >> Events >> Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
(Message started by: omar on Oct 10th, 2005, 12:51pm)

Title: Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
Post by omar on Oct 10th, 2005, 12:51pm
I plan to start contacting companies next year to help further increase the Arimaa challenge prize. My goal will be to see if we can pass the $100,000 mark. I know it will be an uphill battle because I will have to convince people who know nothing about Arimaa that it really is difficult for computers and that promoting research in game playing can lead to advances in other seemingly unrelated areas. To make things a bit easier to swallow I will allow the companies to decide not only the amount they want to pledge but also when they want the pledge to expire. For example a company can say they want to pledge $10,000, but only until 2010. I was planning to start contacting companies this year, but instead focused on adjusting the format of the challenge match. Im confident that I won't need to change the format of the challenge match in the future and can focus on other things.

I am also very confident that the new challenge match format along with the knowledge we have gained about Arimaa, have made the challenge more difficult for computers now than ever before. I really want to thank the Arimaa community for helping to advance our knowledge of the game and widening the gap between humans and computers. How many games do you know where the top rated players are able to defeat the computer at blitz speeds even after taking on major handicaps?

With the increased confidence in Arimaa I am going to personally increase the Arimaa challenge prize further by offering an additional $5,000 until the year 2010. So if someone were to win the prize before 2010 they would get $15,000.

I would like to invite the Arimaa community to also show their level of confidence and make a pledge to further increase the Arimaa challenge prize. You can choose the amount you want to pledge and the year when it will expire. You can also do it as multiple pledges with different amounts and different years for each. I know that many of you now have the same level of confidence in Arimaa as I do, so this is your chance to show it. I think having many people supporting the Arimaa challenge will look very good when I approach people who don't know much about Arimaa. So even if you pledge only a small amount it will still help to increase the number of people. Please don't pledge an unrealistic amount like a million dollars; even if it is for a very short term. If you do, then you really better have that amount and be willing to part with if the challenge is unexpectedly met.

I've added a link at the bottom of the Arimaa challenge page to instructions on how to submit a pledge.
http://arimaa.com/arimaa/challenge/

I don't want to impose a burdon on anyone, but Im sure we can all judicially find an amount and expiration time that we are comfortable with. This is a real test of what others besides myself think about Arimaa. I hope the Arimaa community will step forward to support it. It will provide a lot of encouragment for me when I have to step out next year.


Title: Re: Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
Post by Fritzlein on Oct 11th, 2005, 5:03pm
Sign me up for $500 for this year only.  I'll probably pledge next year too, but I think I would prefer not to pledge beyond my active commitment to Arimaa.  It would be weird for me to have a ten-year pledge if I quit playing next year.   I know $500 for one year only isn't much, but I'll feel totally comfortable forking it over if a bot does win this year.

Admittedly, it is unlikely someone will be inspired to try for $15500 if they weren't inspired to try for $15000, but I think that's beside the point.  It's a way for me to vote my confidence in this wonderful game of Arimaa that Omar created.

I also believe that Omar is dead right about fundraising: big sponsors pay close attention to the behavior of little sponsors with a vested interest.  If he can go around saying that eight of the ten most active players on the server have ponied up money in confidence that Arimaa is hard for computers, the corporate sponsors will get the message loud and clear, no matter what the dollar amount is.  They will understand that there is a community of Arimaa players who believe they can beat the bots and will work together to do it.

Finally I don't forget that I paid fifty bucks for my chess set and Omar was nice enough to make his game playable with the same equipment for free.  And I note that a subscription to the Internet Chess Club is fifty bucks per year, whereas Omar lets us play Arimaa on his server for free, and even pays the Player of the Month for playing!  Next year, if my personal financial picture continues to improve, I'll pledge even more.

Title: Re: Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
Post by PMertens on Oct 11th, 2005, 9:42pm
I will add 1500 - but also for this year only at the moment ...

I am quite confident the breakthrough is not going to happen this year ... but I got big plans for next time  ;)

Title: Re: Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
Post by omar on Oct 12th, 2005, 3:19pm
Thanks for breaking the ice and showing your support guys. As I mentioned, the amount or time frame will not matter as much as the number of people backing the challenge.

Perhaps making a pledge for a year at a time is probably the best way to go for individuals.

Title: Re: Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
Post by PMertens on Oct 12th, 2005, 5:52pm
I sure hope that "breaking the ice" does help ... the pledge/views ratio is still a little disappointing  ::)

Cmon guys ...
Higher stakes means better bot-opponents !
And we really could need some - even if that means we cannot wash the dishes while playing :-P

Title: Re: Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
Post by 99of9 on Oct 13th, 2005, 1:05am
I am in a little bit of a dilemma here.  Here's a bunch of random thoughts.


on 10/10/05 at 12:51:38, omar wrote:
I will have to convince people who know nothing about Arimaa that it really is difficult for computers

Part of my difficulty is that I don't necessarily believe this as strongly as you do Omar.  I think the odds are that a programmer putting in the arimaa_bot hours as a serious hobby will succeed in the challenge before 2010.  If a team or coporation decides to attack it, in my mind it would be almost certain to fall.  That is of course not to diminish the challenge, there is certainly research and work required, it's just that I think this research is achievable.  What is more, the research would not get done without the challenge, so I certainly admire you committing to the challenge in the first place Omar.

(as a side note, if the challenge details are now finalised, I'm planning to open a claim at www.ideosphere.com so that a market-based agglomeration of opinions can give an estimate of the probability of the challenge being won, and if so, the length of time it might take)

On the other hand, I am as confident as Karl and Paul that it won't go off this year.

Should I then make an offer each year I think it is a near certainty the bots will lose, and then pull out when I think it will go off?  That seems a bit disingeneous - even if it will win bigger sponsors.

Or should I view it like Karl's last point - write it off as an entertainment expense like I might if I subscribed to the Internet Chess Club?

Or like Paul's last point - as a bot-bashing entertainment expense?

... but how do these convince the corporate sponsors?  That just proves that I like arimaa and am willing to pay for it.

On one hand I make a reasonable offer, but if my judgement is good/conservative, am highly unlikely to pay it.  On the other hand, I make a small contribution, set my year to 2020, and basically commit to giving it away.

Perhaps I should go for something in between, something that I believe is indeed challenging?  Something that I think has a 50% probability of coming off??  That way, if my expectations are similar to a bot-programmers, it might inspire him/her to try to be that quick.

Anyway, obviously I need to think more.  Please tell me if any of this reasoning is silly.

Ah, I've thought of one more possibility.  If I'm really confident that it will go off before say 2012, perhaps I should offer to pay Omar $$$ if it doesn't go off before then.  That way he'd be able to increase the prize pool by that amount of $$$ between 2012 and 2020, but not before then.  How's that for strange??  Would that help or hinder sponsorship???


Quote:
and that promoting research in game playing can lead to advances in other seemingly unrelated areas.

This I can certainly help you with.  You are welcome to publicise my example of this from a long-previous forum thread (I think it was "Research Arising From Arimaa").

Title: Re: Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
Post by PMertens on Oct 13th, 2005, 1:31am
Hmmmm .....

Maybe just making it for one year in a timeframe where it is absolutely impossible to make something work is really not that great ...

Herewith I change my pledge a little bit:

2006: 2000 (this year)
2007: 1500
2008: 1000
2009: 500
2010: 250

This also reflects the timeframe I expect to be finished with my bot and win the challenge :-)


Anyway ... I think it proves not only that you are willing to pay, but also that you think the risk is minimal ...
While I can certainly afford the money I really would prefer to keep it :-P

Title: Re: Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
Post by Janzert on Oct 13th, 2005, 3:35am

on 10/13/05 at 01:05:32, 99of9 wrote:
Ah, I've thought of one more possibility.  If I'm really confident that it will go off before say 2012, perhaps I should offer to pay Omar $$$ if it doesn't go off before then.  That way he'd be able to increase the prize pool by that amount of $$$ between 2012 and 2020, but not before then.  How's that for strange??  Would that help or hinder sponsorship???


Hmm, sounds like "selling short" (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Short_selling).

Janzert

Title: Re: Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
Post by Arimanator on Oct 13th, 2005, 4:21am

on 10/13/05 at 01:05:32, 99of9 wrote:
I...If a team or coporation decides to attack it, in my mind it would be almost certain to fall...

I sincerely doubt that any corporation would bother to put a team in the hopes of winning $100 000 which as you know is petty change when it comes to finance at team of well paid researchers plus the material plus the infra structures. I mean the naked rooms housing your researchers alone would cost you dozens of thousands dollars a month.

So I wouldn't worry about corporate involvement unless the prize goes up to 10 million or so.

Title: Re: Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
Post by Arimanator on Oct 13th, 2005, 4:28am

on 10/13/05 at 01:31:25, PMertens wrote:
...This also reflects the timeframe I expect to be finished with my bot and win the challenge :-)...


Then why don't you pledge big money on it since you're assured to get it back, in other terms you won't have to actually fork it over?  ;) (joke)

Title: Re: Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
Post by 99of9 on Oct 13th, 2005, 5:48am

on 10/13/05 at 04:21:35, Arimanator wrote:
So I wouldn't worry about corporate involvement unless the prize goes up to 10 million or so.

Yes, you're probably right.  Unless some bigwig company decided to do it for the kudos... but I guess Arimaa's not popular enough for the kudos to be big enough either yet.

Title: Re: Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
Post by Fritzlein on Oct 13th, 2005, 6:33am

on 10/13/05 at 01:05:32, 99of9 wrote:
Part of my difficulty is that I don't necessarily believe this as strongly as you do Omar.  I think the odds are that a programmer putting in the arimaa_bot hours as a serious hobby will succeed in the challenge before 2010.


Ah, this would be a deterrent to pledging prize money.  Obviously the chance of humans losing is cumulative, so if you think bots have a 5% chance of winning each year, then bots have a 54% chance of winning sometime in the next 15 years, so one should bet accordingly.  That I fully understand.

Yet I'm quite surprised that both you and PMertens predict that the chances of humans losing will increase each year, i.e. a higher chance in 2008 than in 2007, assuming it isn't won in 2007.  I don't foresee this at all.  So far the bots had the best chance of winning in 2004, less chance in 2005, and 2006 offers bots the worst prospects yet.  In my estimation, by 2010 human dominance will make the challenge a joke, an annual bot-bashing festival.

My reasoning, of course, is that humans are still rapidly getting better at Arimaa.  I don't yet see a plateau in how good humans can get.  Of course, there will be a point of diminishing returns when increased strategic understanding weighs less than failing to see every move, and at that point computers will start inexorably gaining, if only due to speed improvements.  But I'm stunned that you two foresee this happening sooner rather than later.

I guess I am just going from subjective impressions, but I feel that I am still learning every game, particularly from postal games.  Pardon me for tooting my own horn, but I don't feel I am undefeated postally due to doing the same thing that everyone else does, only doing it more carefully and more accurately.  Rather I feel that I absorbed some strategic ideas sooner and/or at a deeper level than they are widely understood.  Furthermore, I feel that there are large classes of positions that I don't understand well, but I feel some of them gradually seeping into my consciousness to the point that I will be able express them in some future Wikipedia article.

Do you both feel you know most of what there is to know about Arimaa strategy?  Do you think you'll evaluate Arimaa positions five years from now essentially the same as you do now?  If so, I'd like to hear a good rule of thumb as to when the E+H attack is strategically advantageous, a rule will still be generally accepted in 2010.

Just to be perfectly clear about my pledge, I do not intend to decrease it each year, and I don't intend to pull out because loss looks inevitable.  On the contrary, I intend to keep my pledge steady, and even increase it every year if I feel I can afford it.  The reason I keep my timeline short is purely because I can't predict my personal involvement in Arimaa.  I may find a job or another hobby that is more absorbing and takes me away from Arimaa, and I have no desire to pledge when I'm not part of the community of defenders.  But for as long as I'm around playing actively, (OK, with a 2020 cutoff :-)) I'll at least pledge my $500 every year.

Title: Re: Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
Post by jdb on Oct 13th, 2005, 8:00am
I think the reason bots are currently behind is that arimaa strategy is still rapidly evolving. These new strategies are being used on bots that were written before the strategies existed, so any conclusions should be made with care.

However, I think, the strategies developed this year are more difficult for a bot to understand, than the older strategies. Taking a camel hostage is easier to understand, than say flooding rabbits. It will depend on what new strategies are developed in the future.

The current strategies look difficult to implement, but not impossible. My guess is that 99of9's opinion will prove accurate.


Title: Re: Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
Post by Fritzlein on Oct 13th, 2005, 11:00am

on 10/13/05 at 08:00:17, jdb wrote:
These new strategies are being used on bots that were written before the strategies existed, so any conclusions should be made with care.


That's a good point.  Bots haven't had a chance to catch up with the present year of advances in human strategic understanding.  The "widening gap" I keep talking about is between humans who are actively learning and bots which aren't being actively developed, so it's not quite a fair comparison.

Some new strategic knowledge can be expected to benefit bots more than it benefits humans, i.e. the gap will be narrower when both sides know X than it is when neither side knows X.  For example in chess knowing that KQ vs. KBB is won and KQ vs. KNN is a draw (not the other way around as humans had believed) makes humans stronger players, but helps computers more, since compters can play such endgames perfectly while humans still blunder even after learning the technique.

One example I can think of for Arimaa is a good material evaluation scheme.  If there is an accurate formula for material advantage, then it will benefit bots more than humans, since bots will be able to calculate it accurately and quickly.

That said, I think it is reasonable to draw conclusions about the tractability of certain problems judging by progress (or lack thereof) in solving them so far.  The oldest strategies should be handled best by the bots if it is only a matter of encoding catching up to what is known, right?  Yet so far "camel hostage" is the only strategy that Bomb has more or less solved, and even there Omar found a loophole to exploit.  No other bot adequately avoids camel hostages, despite the age of the strategy.  The next oldest and most solved is "elephant blockade".  Bomb has more loopholes there, but existing progress suggests that full blockade possibilities will eventually be a net advantage to bots, not humans as they are now.

Apart from these two areas of progress, the third-oldest strategy, namely "nickel-and-dime" with the lone elephant, which Omar rode to an 8-0 victory in 2003, hasn't been solved yet either, at least not by Bomb.  When the new entrants for the 2006 computer championship come on-line for human play, testing this strategy is my second priority (after camel hostage).  Bots that can't beat a strategy more than two years old need an excuse in addition to recent advancement of human understanding.

This year should give us some good new information about the difficulty of encoding an evaluation of a multi-piece attack, because the E+H attack is now a full year old.  Fotland was definitely trying to adjust to the E+H last year, for example putting horses next to traps rather than dogs, and activating the camel after getting a horse hostage, but these were only stopgaps.  Last year one might have said that the E+H attack was too new to be responded to properly, but after Belbo pummeled Bomb with it 7-1, it has to be addressed this year.

What is the time frame in which unsolved problems go from "We haven't tried yet," to "The year after next we'll think of something for sure," to "It's actually quite a hard problem."?


Quote:
It will depend on what new strategies are developed in the future.


I quite agree that each new strategy affects the balance of power.  Humans will always get a temporary advantage by thinking of it first, but in the long run the advantage may be nullified or turn into outright disadvantage as computers understand it too.

(Now that I think about it, developers might be first to roll out some new strategies too, for a temporary advantage on their side.  How much room to humans have to adapt?  If a bot suddenly did something to shoot its rating to 2300 would humans be able to learn from playing it and get up to 2500?)

The strategies of the future will, I believe, depend much more on the nature of the game of Arimaa than on how assiduously human players or bot developers are applying themselves.  We can only guess whether or not there are machine-understandable ideas that will bust the game and win the challenge.

My current guess is that we will see more and more games in which multiple traps are contested.  I recently played my first game (against Robinson) in which all four traps were simultaneously contested, and I see Belbo vs. Robinson postal is another example with four contested traps.  The key strategic decision is deciding whether to shift the elephant (or other forces), conceding disadvantage in one area to gain advantage elsewhere.  I expect computers to stink at that decision-making when it is strategic, i.e. when no immediate captures are available.  A secondary strategic decision is choosing which trap one should spend time playing at if one isn't going to shift forces.  I also expect computers to be bad at that.

I further predict we will see more congested games with multiple advances by both players long before capturing clarifies the situation.  In the past a lack of captures has usually indicated defensive play by both sides, but in the future we will see a lack of captures also in games with aggressive play and rabbit advances.  Belbo vs. Robinson postal is an example of this phenomenon as well.  Congested games will probably favor humans too, because the positions take longer to change (for example it takes two or three moves for an elephant to cross sides instead of one move in an open position) so long-term planning is more important.  

In the long run, the intentional anti-computer features such a high branching factor and variable initial setup will pale in comparison to  emergent features of excellent play.  From my present understanding, emergent features are favoring humans more and more.   That is to say, the better we play, the more the positions are becoming difficult for computers to understand.  This is quite different than chess, in which best play is quite often tactical and creates positions favorable to computers.

Admittedly this could change.  For example, it could turn out that one can be forced into a race game, i.e. either you race or you accept a disadvantage.  If this were true, then computers might turn out to be better at racing than humans, and humans would have the handicap of having to prevent races.  This would definitely tilt the scales.  But at the moment E+M attacking still looks bad most of the time, so E+H is the closest we get to "forcing" a race, and the defender has so many resources against E+H we're not even sure when it is an advantage and when it is a disadvatage.  At present bots can bungle it from either side, losing both when they attack with E+H and when they defend against an E+H attack.  (Of course, at present bots also lose races ;-) but that seems potentially easier to correct.)


Quote:
The current strategies look difficult to implement, but not impossible.


Given that statement, JDB, I'm very curious to see what Clueless does about E+H this year.  At the moment Clueless handles it better than Bomb, because Clueless will go nuts with its camel.  This often results in Clueless losing camel for horse, which is better than losing the whole game slowly and surely like Bomb does, but still isn't much of a solution.  In fact, it doesn't even look close to a solution.

I guess it is in the nature of the Arimaa Challenge that non-programmers will be skeptical of what bots can do, because they don't know enough to know what is possible.  When I say "It can't be done," I really mean "I don't understand how it can be done," which reflects more on my poor understanding than on the reality of the situation.

On the other hand, it is probably equally natural for programmers to be overconfident.  When you have an idea that hasn't been tried yet, it is easy to suppose that it will work.  And if it doesn't work, you can always generate another idea.

This chasm in expectations is well and good.  After all, if all bot developers were as pessimistic as I am about their chances, they would all give up and go home.  :P  

Title: Re: Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
Post by omar on Oct 15th, 2005, 12:32pm
Wow, you triggered an avalanche of discussion here Toby. Thanks for livening up this topic.


on 10/13/05 at 01:05:32, 99of9 wrote:
I think the odds are that a programmer putting in the arimaa_bot hours as a serious hobby will succeed in the challenge before 2010.  

If Arimaa continues to have the kind of players that it already has now there is no way this is possible. Im the kind of person that is ready to put my money where my mouth is in things I beleive in strongly. I would be ready to take you up on this at whatever stakes you chose. But I think you should reconsider this. 2010 is only 5 years away. Hardware speeds might quadruple by then, but that will hardly effect things. So you would really be betting that there is going to be a software breakthrough or that incremental improvements in the evaluation functions will significantly surpass human players. If the first happens then you deserve to win for calling that, but I don't think that's what you are counting on. What are the chances of the second happening. I think we can look at Chess, Go and Shogi for guidance. In all these games the best programs are ones that have highly tuned (usually hand tweeked) evaluation functions. Only in chess are computers now starting to surpass the best players. In the other two, computers are way behind. The nature of chess is so tactics oriented that it amazes me we still have some humans that can stand up to computers. The other two games are more strategy oriented; there are tactics, but they don't dominate the nature of the game. I think Arimaa fits firmly into the second catagory and so by its very nature will be resisent to computers. But what about the possibility that due to the small human player population and limited knowledge about the game, computers will supass the humans. If Naveed and I were the only human Arimaa players I think this would be possible :-) However, we now have some players (like Karl, Frank, Pat, Paul, yourself and more)  who don't seem to have an upper limit in their potential especially when it comes to playing computers. If the computers start winning humans will analyze the games, figure out what went wrong, develop counter strategies and learn to crush it especially in slow time control games. If you remember the early days of Arimaa we didn't even know the concept of taking a camel hostage until Claude stumbled on it. After that all the humans suddenly became better against bot_Bomb. Or when Ceejay stumbled on Bait and Tackle. That allowed me to consistently win against bot_Speedy; and you know how terrible I am at fast speeds :-) Humans will learn from the computers faster than they will learn from us. That I think is the key which will allow humans to stay ahead of the computers well beyond 2010.


Quote:
If a team or coporation decides to attack it, in my mind it would be almost certain to fall.

No way. If the Arimaa challenge attracted a corporation and became a high profile topic, it would also attract a lot of human players which would help increase our knowledge of the game and the level of the highest players would continue to rise even faster. So it would balance itself out to the first senerio.


Quote:
(as a side note, if the challenge details are now finalised, I'm planning to open a claim at www.ideosphere.com so that a market-based agglomeration of opinions can give an estimate of the probability of the challenge being won, and if so, the length of time it might take)

Unless I am not able to find three humans players for the challenge match, I don't think there would be any need to change it. Go ahead with the posting, it will be interesting to see what the general public thinks.


Quote:
Should I then make an offer each year I think it is a near certainty the bots will lose, and then pull out when I think it will go off?  That seems a bit disingeneous - even if it will win bigger sponsors.

Or should I view it like Karl's last point - write it off as an entertainment expense like I might if I subscribed to the Internet Chess Club?

Or like Paul's last point - as a bot-bashing entertainment expense?

... but how do these convince the corporate sponsors?  That just proves that I like arimaa and am willing to pay for it.

I don't think corporate sponsors care about the details of what others motivation for sponsorship might be; they usually only look at the big picture. Their main concern is going to be: how risky is this and what do we get out of it. If I go to a corporate sponsor and say "look I created this game and put out a challenge, would you like to join me in increasing the challenge prize" they are going to think Im nuts. On the other hand if I can say "there's twenty other sponsors supporting the challenge, would you like to join" it gives them more confidence to do it.

So my suggestion would be to pledge year to year if that's what you feel comfortable with. But do pledge so that there will be more total sponsors.

Also taking a stance on the Arimaa challenge will end up making this long term adventure more interesting and entertaining for yourself.


Quote:
On one hand I make a reasonable offer, but if my judgement is good/conservative, am highly unlikely to pay it.  On the other hand, I make a small contribution, set my year to 2020, and basically commit to giving it away.

Perhaps I should go for something in between, something that I believe is indeed challenging?  Something that I think has a 50% probability of coming off??  That way, if my expectations are similar to a bot-programmers, it might inspire him/her to try to be that quick.

You can make multiple pledges with different time frames. So you don't have to acheive everything with just one pledge. So you could make one pledge with a large amount for a short time frame and another pledge with a small amount for a long time frame.


Quote:
Ah, I've thought of one more possibility.  If I'm really confident that it will go off before say 2012, perhaps I should offer to pay Omar $$$ if it doesn't go off before then.  That way he'd be able to increase the prize pool by that amount of $$$ between 2012 and 2020, but not before then.  How's that for strange??  Would that help or hinder sponsorship???

Interesting twist. This would help to attract more bot developers by providing a more constant prize through the life of the challenge, but would not help with attracting corporate sponsors; might actually hinder sponsorship. But then again if I can't get them to do a forward sponsorship maybe they would be willing to do such a reverse sponsorship. What Im worried about is that corporate sponsors won't want to take any stance at all; they worry too much about stuff like, corporate image, risk managment, return on investment, etc. But if you want to do it this way, that would be fine with me.


Quote:
This I can certainly help you with.  You are welcome to publicise my example of this from a long-previous forum thread (I think it was "Research Arising From Arimaa").

Yes I remember you posted about this earlier. If you have a paper about the research and it mentions Arimaa, game playing, etc. then it would definitely help.

Title: Re: Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
Post by omar on Oct 15th, 2005, 12:47pm

on 10/13/05 at 04:21:35, Arimanator wrote:
I sincerely doubt that any corporation would bother to put a team in the hopes of winning $100 000 ...

So I wouldn't worry about corporate involvement unless the prize goes up to 10 million or so.


I agree. But imagine a senerio where there are many corporate sponsors making big short term pledges and competing with each other to see who will be the first to get the cumulative prize (and also a boosted corporate image; which for corporations is probably more important). That would be cool.

I've read that the jump in IBMs stock price the day they defeated GK caused an increase in their market capital which way surpassed all the expenses.


Title: Re: Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
Post by omar on Oct 15th, 2005, 12:55pm

on 10/13/05 at 05:48:41, 99of9 wrote:
Yes, you're probably right.  Unless some bigwig company decided to do it for the kudos... but I guess Arimaa's not popular enough for the kudos to be big enough either yet.


Yes, it's the chicken or the egg kind of thing. I think we've finished the DNA; maybe we're building the yolk now :-)

Title: Re: Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
Post by nbarriga on Oct 18th, 2005, 12:06am

on 10/13/05 at 01:05:32, 99of9 wrote:
(as a side note, if the challenge details are now finalised, I'm planning to open a claim at www.ideosphere.com so that a market-based agglomeration of opinions can give an estimate of the probability of the challenge being won, and if so, the length of time it might take)


I suggest you open at least 2 claims, one for 2010 and one for 2020. Perhaps you could also open yearly claims starting with 2007.

Title: Re: Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
Post by 99of9 on Oct 26th, 2005, 2:41am

on 10/15/05 at 12:32:19, omar wrote:
Yes I remember you posted about this earlier. If you have a paper about the research and it mentions Arimaa, game playing, etc. then it would definitely help.


D.R. Mason, T.S. Hudson* and A.P. Sutton,  Computer Physics Communications, Volume 165, Issue 1 , 1 January 2005, Pages 37-48
* Corresponding Author

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science?_ob=ArticleURL&_udi=B6TJ5-4DS9SS8-1&_coverDate=01%2F01%2F2005&_alid=327842502& _rdoc=1&_fmt=&_orig=search&_qd=1&_cdi=5301 &_sort=d&view=c&_acct=C000008818&_version=1&_urlVersion=0&_userid=115085&md5=e69c5977de13910b54df45b6a0e21f4f

Sorry, it doesn't mention Arimaa (I should have thought of including an acknowledgement at the time!), but it does mention that Zobrist was conceived for game-AI programming.  I only learnt about Zobrist because I was programming an Arimaa bot (I learnt it from a chess site).

Title: Re: Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
Post by minhtuan on Jan 30th, 2006, 7:19am
Hello All

I am just a newcomer. I know Arimaa from English Wikipedia. This is a good game, and Mr. Omar is good at creating the game that have very big game-tree with impossibly high number of available moves. I never think a computer could beat human in this game, since the Arimaa strategy is too hard to implement in software.

But I now think about Arimaa's popularity. Sure, it fulfils your childhood fantasies of jumping to grab a flag as the goal, and it greatly fulfils Mr. Omar's paternal instinct.

But compared from  orthodox chess, or new computer game like AOE series or HalfLife, this game is not a war imitation game and therefore it is hard to promote this game. Chess and its variants are so popular because it satisfies our violent instincts and promote our fighting spirit. "Fight on the board instead of making war" is chess' motto.

What I see in Arimaa? All childhood push me pull you tactics. It is a strategic game, yes, but it reminds me of a good time at a park with my friends. Nothing more.

Wow I am not a butcher. But I certainly think of other game rather than Arimaa when I need to release our old-fashioned violent emotions, which is rather common in our hectic fast-paced world.

 

Title: Re: Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
Post by PMertens on Jan 30th, 2006, 7:46am
:o

Well well ... I clearly think pulling your defenseless horse away and push it into my (spiked) trap suits my violent instincts :-D
At least as cruel as jumping with my horse on your bishop in chess ....
OK .... rabbits are not really the typical killeranimals, but do not underestimate their teeth  ;D

Title: Re: Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
Post by RonWeasley on Jan 30th, 2006, 11:54am

Quote:
this game is not a war imitation game and therefore it is hard to promote this game

This point is true.  Arimaa can't compete with interactive video games as an imitation of warfare.  Chess doesn't either, although wizard's chess has it's moments of violence, but most sets come with an infirmary with the proper healing spells.  You can usually play the healed pieces again in only a few days.

The animal icons serve to soften what could be a metaphor for a more modern form of warfare.  Arimaa involves the strong kidnapping the weak, holding them hostage, and if concessions are not made, killing the hostage.  Sometimes you do this in the enemy's home.  Surely this is the ultimate in villainy.

The icons could be worse.  Imagine the faces of famous and imfamous political and military leaders from history placed on the board.  Heads of state, if you will.

So, I assert arimaa is similar to chess in the warfare metaphor.  I think it has the same disadvantage in that good play involves patience and concentration at a level few people can attain.  It's development is a great achievement for Omar.

Title: Re: Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
Post by omar on Feb 8th, 2006, 5:49pm

on 01/30/06 at 07:19:40, minhtuan wrote:
What I see in Arimaa? All childhood push me pull you tactics. It is a strategic game, yes, but it reminds me of a good time at a park with my friends. Nothing more.


I definitely agree with you that I feel a lot more relaxed when I play Arimaa then when I play chess; though not to the point of feeling like Im at the park :-) I am definitely a lot more nervious when playing chess than Arimaa. I've thought about this before and I think it might be due to the sharp tactics in chess and the softer strategic nature of Arimaa. I like to think of chess as a sword fight and  Arimaa as a wrestling match. Chess is very sharp and unforgiving; one little mistake can spell death; Arimaa is a softer, slower struggle and it feels like you can actually recover from small mistakes.

There was a time when I was searching for info on what makes a game interesting and I came across a couple of good articles:

Defining the Abstract:
http://www.thegamesjournal.com/articles/DefiningtheAbstract.shtml

Chess vs Shogi
http://www.shogi.net/shogi-l/Archive/1999/Nfeb07-06.txt

Based on the criterias given in these articles Arimaa does extreamly well. The only place it is lacking is in history and tradition because it is a new game. But in the long run I hope that it will have the most well preserved history and well established traditions.

The people who are playing Arimaa now are the type who are self thinkers and early adapters. They don't need anyone else to tell them what is good and like to decide for themselves. The majority of the people really depend on trusted sources to tell them what is good. This is why celeberties are used to promote commercial products :-)

Title: Re: Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
Post by Fritzlein on Feb 8th, 2006, 9:04pm
Interesting links, Omar.  I find Thompson's dichotomies much more compelling than Kaufman's eight-point scale, mostly because I don't think the elements in Kaufman's scale should have equal weight, but also partly because he himself shows how easy it is to assign the points haphazardly within his scale.

Thompson sets up the depth-clarity tension very well.  You need to be able to find a handle in the position, some way to make it sensible rather than merely arbitrary or a matter of who overlooks something.  If you have a bit of clarity that your opponent doesn't, you can win consistently without him understanding why, which sets up a level of depth.  But what happens when he learns what you know?  Is there another level of understanding awaiting, or do you both have all the clarity the game offers, reducing it once again to a contest of who makes a blunder?

I haven't played much Go, but from what I hear it is phenomenal on this axis.  Students of the game achieve successive jumps in levels of awareness, and become able to simply "see" things that earlier didn't enter into their thought processes.  I don't know whether top Go players are pushing the edge of all that is learnable about the game, but even if they have maxed out, Go is a game worthy of a lifetime of study.

Unless I miss my guess, Arimaa is going to fare very well in terms of depth and clarity.  I've already gone through a cycle or two of learning a new way of looking at things that subsumes the old way, and allows me to make sense of formerly opaque situations.  But there are still positions, quite common positions, that utterly confuse me.  I hold out hope that another revelation will bring clarity to some of those, and so on for some time.

As for the drama-decisiveness axis, Arimaa also does extremely well.  We've all seen too many remarkable comebacks to argue that Arimaa lacks drama.   And it is important that the comebacks don't have to involve tactical blunders.  Adanac's lone WC win over Robinson was a recovery from a substantial deficit, but it didn't happen in one move, it happened gradually, strategically.

Arimaa is a very decisive game as well.  Small advantages tend to become bigger and bigger as the game progresses.  An extra rabbit in the opening can hardly be felt, but an extra rabbit in the endgame is of great importance.  At the moment there seems to be no danger that the weaker side can recover from every small mistake and keep the game in balance: on the contrary small mistakes seem to accumulate, and can only be given back by compensatory mistakes.

When dual-lone elephant play was common, it seemed that Arimaa might not be sufficiently decisive, because it is easier to retreat pieces than it is to drag them out.  However, I am confident there will never be a return to pure dual-lone elephant play, given the modern knowledge that a horse can dart in advantageously on the opponent's non-camel side.  There will always be rabbit pulls at least to dis-equilibriate the game, and once the game gets out of balance, it is almost impossible for it to calm back down to equilibrium.

I wonder, though.  Do I like Thompson's criteria because Arimaa does so well by them?  Or do I like Arimaa because it does so well by Thompson's criteria?

Title: Re: Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
Post by IdahoEv on Feb 28th, 2006, 10:37pm
I'd think about pitching in, but since I'm going to win it the process would be somewhat moot.

:-)

Title: Re: Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
Post by omar on Mar 4th, 2006, 11:59am

on 02/28/06 at 22:37:43, IdahoEv wrote:
I'd think about pitching in, but since I'm going to win it the process would be somewhat moot.

:-)


Are you planning to develop a bot?

Title: Re: Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
Post by IdahoEv on Mar 9th, 2006, 11:58pm

on 03/04/06 at 11:59:42, omar wrote:
Are you planning to develop a bot?


Sssh... don't tell anyone.   It's a secret.

(Yes, I have begun development in my copious free time.)



Title: Re: Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
Post by Swynndla on Mar 10th, 2006, 11:53pm
If there was not only the 3 top human players that the top bot challenges, but if there was also another 3 humans that were the winners of a "premier reserve" competition (who are weaker than the top human squad) who also play the top bot, where the results in no way affect the challenge prize money, then if they all easily beat the top bot also, then corporations would see that if the bots don't even stand up against the "B" squad, then the bots will have next to no chance of beating the "A" squad, and their money will be safe.

This would be especially true if the "premier reserve" competition didn't include any of the players who enter the proper world champs.

What do you think? ... or perhaps a variation of this?


Title: Re: Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
Post by PMertens on Mar 11th, 2006, 4:23pm
actually I was B-squad ;-) but chosen for other reasons ....

If you look at the challenge games I am certain you can see how easily bomb was beaten with mostly one main strategy ... and that could have done anyone among the Top 20 (or more) without a change in result.

Title: Re: Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
Post by Fritzlein on Jul 31st, 2006, 9:17pm
It just occured to me that another natural sponsor (apart from computer companies) would be a game manufacturer, specifically Hasbro.  If I'm not mistaken, Hasbro puts up $50,000 in prize money each year for the National Scrabble Championship.  (By the way, that's coming up next week, and the finals will be taped by ESPN for later broadcast.)

Obviously Arimaa is nowhere near as big a deal as Scrabble is, but also the prize money for Arimaa doesn't have to be paid out each year.  Furthermore, Hasbro might produce Arimaa commercially as part of the deal.  If they were selling the game and profiting from it, they would want to promote the Arimaa Challenge as well.

I think the stuff we are doing with the Wikibook and the commented game viewer and so on should also be encouraging to Hasbro.  Not only would they see that folks are already jazzed about the game, but also they would see a pre-existing community for the game as a plus.  They wouldn't have to start marketing from the ground up, having a (small but enthusiastic) built-in set of buyers.  Furthermore, they could count on getting not only the rules, but probably also a primer on strategy written up for free by the Arimaa community.  (It would have to be done from scratch, of course, due to the GFDL on Wikipedia, but that's not a big deal.)

Well, it's just a thought I wanted to throw out there, in case Omar ever has time to read the forum again.  :P  (I know you're busy Omar -- the preceding was not a criticism.)

P.S. 99of9, could you break up the three-mile-long link in your previous post?  It's making this thread display funny in my browser.  :o

Title: Re: Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
Post by nbarriga on Jul 31st, 2006, 10:21pm
I've always thought that we need to team up with a University. I've done my best here, introducing arimaa to a couple of AI teachers, giving presentations in classes i am taking or teaching, but i haven't been able to attract too much attention.

Maybe somebody with a little mor influence in their University...

Title: Re: Increasing the Arimaa Challenge prize
Post by Fritzlein on Aug 4th, 2006, 7:23pm
Yes, maybe academic sponsorship is a more promising avenue than corporate sponsorship.  How is anyone going to make money from Arimaa?  Looking back on my post about Hasbro, I did a tiny bit of research and found a Web site that says Scrabble sells 3,000,000 copies worldwide each year.  Of course a game that is already so popular will attract corporate interest.  For something nascent like Arimaa, there's almost no advertising value to be had in sponsorship.  The only possible money would be in producing and selling the game, and even if Arimaa could sell 5,000 copies a year, that's just a rounding error for Hasbro.  If there's no money it, corporations won't be interested, because they exist only to make money.

Academics, on the other hand, are interested in cool ideas, and in primary research.  They are used to spending money they won't get back, and expecting nothing more than to learn in the process.  If we could get some university interested in Arimaa as a research project, where some of their students are studying it, then they might also sponsor tournaments and wider competitions.  Maybe.

At the end of the day, it's clear I am not cut out to be an entrepreneur, because to me it looks like nothing can succeed unless it is already successful.   :-/



Arimaa Forum » Powered by YaBB 1 Gold - SP 1.3.1!
YaBB © 2000-2003. All Rights Reserved.