gordontd, on 2018-December-16, 02:34, said:
In which other games are you expected to make decisions without knowing your current position? I don't say there are no others, just that none come immediately to my mind.
blackshoe, on 2018-December-16, 13:46, said:
My first guess would be any wargame that includes "fog of war".
If you can't do better than that then it isn't much of an argument
I've done many established sports, and when trying to win I have always known which of my real competitors is ahead at the moment. In athletics it is difficult to compare heats, in cycling you might occasionally miss somebody, but as a rule you know.
sanst, on 2018-December-16, 02:51, said:
But the Bridgemate doesnt show that, just the scores on the board played. You need the app to see the actual rankings, if this service is provided by the organiser.
I guess that again it is a question of configuration. Here, after opponents confirm the score, the bridgemate allows you to check the result and this shows both the score and the temporary percentage on that board (43% or whatever). It doesn't show the ranking in the competition, but some organisers project that on a screen too.
barmar, on 2018-December-16, 12:09, said:
We use BridgeTab (a scoring application for Android tablets) and it apparently only notifies the director, not the table, when it's an impossible lead (I suspect that's a configuration option, but haven't bugged the director to change it). We also have several Norths who routinely click "Skip" because they can't be bothered to remember what the opening lead was.
The one time I recall us seeing the wrong board results was because we'd played the board out of order, and didn't realize that the board number was not the expected one until after confirming it and noticing that the other results made no sense.
As configured here, the Bridgemate refuses an impossible lead, which I think makes sense. Of course it's only a 75% check, but much better than none.