JLOGIC, on 2012-March-15, 18:32, said:
I agree that the whole "you have the best hand" thing is questionable at best whether it is "bridge" or not. It seems like you're sacrificing something about the game in order for people to have a better time (as fred said, there are random deal tournaments, and most people choose best hand ones instead, including me).
IMO it is minor enough to not matter, but of course there is the question of where to draw the line and that might be a slippery slope.
I do not agree at all that playing with/against robots is questionable as to whether you are still playing "bridge" or not. The robots play bridge. In fact, they play bridge much better than the average human. They count, they squeeze, they endplay, they play a system, they have idiosyncrasies, whatever. Artificial intelligence is real. Even if robots are not near the very top human players (yet) it doesn't matter, they are still playing bridge, and playing against them is no different than playing against humans imo.
So, if the ACBL were to implement a ban against rules that go against "bridge" I could understand if they forced BBO to run random hand tournaments rather than best hand tournaments. That would be a shame, but fine imo, I would get it. At the end of the day people would still have the same hands, and would still be competing in a duplicate bridge game against other humans, it just might be more boring to most people, which is not necessarily horrible (but bad imo).
If the ACBL were to implement a band against rules that go against bridge, and ban sanctioning of ROBOT games, I would have a huge problem with that, and would consider that just to be an anti technology/ignorant stance.
I would also be curious to see if they banned sanctioning of clubs that had no psyching or similar rules.
I agree with Justin that the GIB robots play bridge better than the average human, but they are not currently near the very top human players. I believe that it may not be possible to ever program the GIB robots to play as well as the very top human players. However, it does not matter that the robots are ever programmed to play at the highest level. The fact is that they are already programmed to play well enough that they can be a good test for many bridge skills. Although I am not anywhere near "the very top human players", declarer play has always been a relative strength of mine. I can say that playing the ACBL robot games has improved my declarer play and I believe that it can improve the declarer play of anyone, with the possible exception of "the very top human players". Also, it is correct what many others have already mentioned that the ACBL robot games are one of the truest measures of skill since everyone encounters the same "partner and opponents" on every hand.