I see some of the tournaments on BBO are hosted by the ACBL and mention they're governed by the GCC. But there are also tournaments hosted by many others where the rules are less clear to me looking.
What are the general rules of play for these other tournaments on BBO? Are they also GCC or generally less restrictive like only no HUMs?
I'm interested in playing with a weak opening bidding system like MOSCITO, but it seems GCC doesn't allow this. So I'm wondering if there will be opportunities to play online with such a system.
I'm mostly interested in the Pairs tournaments on BBO, because my understanding of the individual tournaments is that you always partner with one of the robots who only play 2/1.
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What rules do BBO pairs tournaments use?
#2
Posted 2018-April-28, 15:29
Every tourney host sets their own rules. Ideally they should be mentioned in the tourney details, but not all tourney hosts do this, especially the free tourneys. If you're not sure what's allowed, contact the tourney host.
You don't partner with a robot in individual tourneys, you partner with a different human each round. The tournaments where you partner with a robot are the Robot Duplicate, Instant Tournaments, and Daylong Tournaments. These are also described as individual tournaments, but there are also traditional individuals with no robots.
You don't partner with a robot in individual tourneys, you partner with a different human each round. The tournaments where you partner with a robot are the Robot Duplicate, Instant Tournaments, and Daylong Tournaments. These are also described as individual tournaments, but there are also traditional individuals with no robots.
#3
Posted 2018-April-28, 18:10
barmar, good idea to contact the tourney hosts. And thanks for clarifying about the individual tourneys!
hrothgar, thanks for mentioning Open Chart! I had missed that ACBL was revising their convention parts and going into effect in November. Link to the new charts in case anyone else missed that: https://docs.google....=h.yxnvppfo0dpb
hrothgar, thanks for mentioning Open Chart! I had missed that ACBL was revising their convention parts and going into effect in November. Link to the new charts in case anyone else missed that: https://docs.google....=h.yxnvppfo0dpb
#4
Posted 2018-April-29, 06:34
evanrmurph, on 2018-April-28, 13:58, said:
I see some of the tournaments on BBO are hosted by the ACBL and mention they're governed by the GCC. But there are also tournaments hosted by many others where the rules are less clear to me looking.
What are the general rules of play for these other tournaments on BBO? Are they also GCC or generally less restrictive like only no HUMs?
I'm interested in playing with a weak opening bidding system like MOSCITO, but it seems GCC doesn't allow this. So I'm wondering if there will be opportunities to play online with such a system.
I'm mostly interested in the Pairs tournaments on BBO, because my understanding of the individual tournaments is that you always partner with one of the robots who only play 2/1.
What are the general rules of play for these other tournaments on BBO? Are they also GCC or generally less restrictive like only no HUMs?
I'm interested in playing with a weak opening bidding system like MOSCITO, but it seems GCC doesn't allow this. So I'm wondering if there will be opportunities to play online with such a system.
I'm mostly interested in the Pairs tournaments on BBO, because my understanding of the individual tournaments is that you always partner with one of the robots who only play 2/1.
The rules concerning competitive bridge are the Laws of Duplicate Bridge as agreed by the American Contract Bridge League,The British Bridge League in the UK and the
European Bridge League for other countries. The Laws are periodically updated. to keep up with modern trends.
"It is not enough to be a good player, you must also play well"
- Dr Tarrasch(1862-1934)German Chess Grandmaster
Bridge is a game where you have two opponents...and often three(!)
"Any palooka can take tricks with Aces and Kings; the true expert shows his prowess
by how he handles the two's and three's" - Mollo's Hideous Hog
- Dr Tarrasch(1862-1934)German Chess Grandmaster
Bridge is a game where you have two opponents...and often three(!)
"Any palooka can take tricks with Aces and Kings; the true expert shows his prowess
by how he handles the two's and three's" - Mollo's Hideous Hog
#5
Posted 2018-April-29, 07:04
PhilG007, on 2018-April-29, 06:34, said:
The rules concerning competitive bridge are the Laws of Duplicate Bridge as agreed by the American Contract Bridge League,The British Bridge League in the UK and the
European Bridge League for other countries. The Laws are periodically updated. to keep up with modern trends.
European Bridge League for other countries. The Laws are periodically updated. to keep up with modern trends.
Correct , but utterly irrelevant.
The original question has to do with the conditions of contest used by individual tournaments which are at the discretion of the event sponsor.
Alderaan delenda est
#6
Posted 2018-April-29, 13:18
Please take discussion about interpretation of the new ACBL Convention Charts to a more appropriate foum, e.g. Changing Laws and Regulations, it's off-topic for this thread.
#7
Posted 2018-April-30, 09:22
barmar, on 2018-April-29, 13:18, said:
Please take discussion about interpretation of the new ACBL Convention Charts to a more appropriate foum, e.g. Changing Laws and Regulations, it's off-topic for this thread.
I moved all the posts about Richard's MOSCITO variation to http://www.bridgebas...cbl-open-chart/
#8
Posted 2018-May-10, 14:50
Following up on the original topic, can anyone recommend any regular online tournaments with more permissive rules than GCC or even Open Chart, i.e. which allow bidding systems like MOSCITO?
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