Category: gameplay

2019 review, and a small confession

Comments scattered across various social medias implied we had a very random calendar this year but despite this, a huge congratulations to two-time former winner Andrew Chilcraft who broke the World Record score for the Advent Calendar Challenge – and to Håkan Wolgé, who broke it by more! It was Håkan’s first win in the challenge, having previously had a best finish of sixth back in 2018.

In the team’s championship, Leo stormed to their fifth victory in seven years. They had more players, which of course helps, but a superb effort all round Leos! I might be tempted to try and even out the effects of uneven teams going forward, but it’s way down the list of priorities!

So to my mini confession. I’m happy to class the source of this year’s calendar as an Advent Calendar, but to describe it as a thing with doors is a stretch. Two years ago the NSPCC Christmas lights on Oxford Street in London looked like this:

Doors 1-6 of this year's advent calendar
Doors 1-6 of this year's advent calendar
Doors 7-12 of this year's advent calendar
Doors 7-12 of this year's advent calendar
Doors 13-18 of this year's advent calendar
Doors 13-18 of this year's advent calendar
Doors 19-24 of this year's advent calendar
Doors 19-24 of this year's advent calendar

I get constantly nervous that one year the challenge will be ruined by someone having the same calendar I am using, so have over the year employed various tactics to try and prevent it – foreign calendars, using old calendars. This is the first time I used a giant calendar suspended high above a famous London street from history! I hope I am forgiven for such subterfuge!

Happy Christmas to everyone, and wishing you all a prosperous 2020. See you next November for the 2020 running of the ACC 🙂

Last quarter

We are now three-quarters of the way through this year’s Advent Calendar Challenge – yet again we have Santa appearing for the first time before day 24. A quick glance reveals that 2014 was the last time Santa made it’s first appearance on Christmas Eve. The downside is no-one scored today, but that was kinda predictable! I didn’t make the calendar so it’s obviously out of my control!

A quick note on the matters raised in the previous post. On dummy/red-herring answers, I will think about this before the 2020 challenge further, maybe with some thinking-out-loud analysis: watch this space! On the other matter, on whether to hide guesses after day 18 or not, I have a compromise. The compromise was partially inspired when I was asked by a competitor privately if I would hide guesses or not. I replied I intended to leave things as they were (i.e. hidden after window 18) and that I would make the announcement in this blog post today. The competitor pointed out that I had just given them a possible advantage in that they could now take a copy of everyone’s guesses, knowing what was about to come. It got me thinking – whilst it’s a slight advantage only because everyone could take such a copy at any time, there’s a half-way approach between the two I asked you to choose between in the last post, and it is that approach that I have settled on.

So from now on*, guesses made after the opening of window 18 will be hidden. Guesses made before that point will not be. Trial basis, and we’ll see how it goes.

Six days left. Good luck everyone!

-* it’s not been implemented properly – the official rules pdf is pending update, and the censorship still applies on individual profile pages. Those will be fixed tomorrow!

History of guessing

At the end of this post, having stream-of-consciousness-style rambled about things for a few paragraphs, I’m going to invite readers to maybe prevent me making a rule change that I might regret, so do read on!

Long term players will remember how it used to be, of course, when it comes to guessing. Newer players might only know the way it is now. As I type, in 2019, players make their guess from a list of items that contains only those things that actually appear in the calendar. It has been this way for a few years, having evolved – the first time a list appeared was in 2013 and that contained 36 items, i.e. anything up to twelve (I can’t remember exactly how many) red herrings. This was decreased to 30 items (i.e. up to six red herrings) the next year, and then down to the current zero red herrings system in 2015. It has been that way ever since, and I am, broadly speaking, a fan. One stage I would like to take it to, and might well do for next year, is to include a single red herring – this would give everyone a choice to make on day 24; I think it is possibly a weakness of the system that anyone paying attention can gain themselves 24 points on the final day. That said, to do this might not be compatible with the next thing I’d like to turn my attention to, and this is the main point of this post.

Currently guesses are hidden from everyone – including the players that made them – after the 18th day. I reasoned that it didn’t matter if you didn’t know your own guess, as you could simply assess what you’d want it to be and submit it again. The reason the guesses were hidden in the first place was to prevent a situation where a player could secure a victory simply by matching the guess of the players behind them in the table rather than guessing “properly”. In the current days where everyone normally ends up on the same guess by the end anyway this is probably rather redundant, and in any case, if you have established a lead then maybe this could be seen as a reward for doing so? In any event it’s unlikely just one player (especially on the current scoring system) will be close behind and you can’t neutralise the guess of more than one player at once anyway…

So I guess I am giving provisional notice of two changes: (1) to be implemented this year: I am proposing that guesses are no longer hidden after day 18 as I assess that it is largely redundant to do so, and (2) to be implemented from 2020 onwards: to add one dummy item to the selection list to give players a choice to make on day 24.

There are surely side-effects to these choices that I haven’t thought through, so please leave comments (either for or against) if you have an opinion on the above. Much appreciated, thank you!

2019 windows

As stated in my previous post, I’m in a position to reveal what is behind the windows this year – just not which windows these items appear behind! In alphabetical order:

  •  bauble
  • bell
  • candy cane
  • carrot
  • christmas tree
  • cracker
  • gift
  • gingerbread man
  • glove
  • holly
  • ice skate
  • reindeer
  • robin
  • rocking horse
  • santa
  • shooting star
  • sleigh
  • snow globe
  • snowflake
  • snowman
  • stocking
  • sweets
  • woolly hat
  • wreath

Without wishing to be too revealing (there’s some things you should have to do yourself), I make that two new items, lots of old favourites, and a couple of weird ones. PINs should be coming out on Thursday, but I have a busy day that day so they might end up with you tomorrow night instead. Exciting times!

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