Stefan_O, on 2016-September-06, 07:58, said:
Or is there something abt Bridge that (at least at some occasions) makes it a more
satisfying/thrilling/challenging/enjoyable/addictive/.../whatnot activity?
Yes. Especially system design, which I think of as a game somewhat similar to chess, only vastly more complex, at least in principle. (The first "move" in this game, if we restrict ourselves to pure strategy bidding systems, consists in assigning one of 2
635 013 559 600 possible meanings, corresponding to the number of subsets of the set of all possible bridge hands, to Pass and each bid between 1
♣ and 7N. That number is already vastly bigger than the number of possible chess games. (If I'm talking nonsense, please let me know.
)) But although (bridge bidding) system design is definitely a bridge related activity, it's not really part of the game we call "bridge" that starts with someone dealing a deck of cards. And I'm afraid it's a good idea to try to make the prospect of becoming a system designer a major selling point unless we want bridge to be played by only 14 people by 2070.
I don't even know the rules of Dota 2, btw, so I don't have an opinion on which game is better. But I play chess, and right now I probably enjoy playing (mediocre to abysmal) chess on chess.com more than (hopefully quite good) bridge on BBO, something I'm afraid has everything to do with the different policies on rating systems. At least I know that if chess.com for some reason decided to adopt BBO's rating system policy tomorrow, I'd immediately run to their biggest competitor, chess24.com, or even (reluctantly) start to play more bridge on BBO again. So I guess that, for me,
unrated chess on chess.com < unrated bridge on BBO < rated chess on chess.com < rated bridge on BBO
and maybe also
unrated chess < unrated bridge < rated chess < rated bridge.