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Subject: Re: Funding opportunity WCCC 2004

Author: Tony Werten

Date: 02:11:46 05/18/04

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On May 18, 2004 at 04:10:11, Mark Winands wrote:

>OCTI
>Challenger: Donald Green
>
>OCTI is a simple, yet deep game of strategy designed to give humans
>an edge over computers. The basic premise of the game is that players build
>their pieces as they play. On each turn, a player must decide whether to
>move a piece, improve a piece, or add a new piece to the board. This simple
>framework creates an extraordinary array of strategic options and
>plays to "human" strengths: long-term planning and heuristic reasoning. GAMES
>MAGAZINE named OCTI "Best Abstract Strategy Game of the Year." For a
>description of the game and other reviews, visit www.octi-online.com.
>
>OCTI AI Tournament Computer Olympiad 2004
>
>Competitions will be held for the following OCTI variants:
>
>I. OCTI on a 6x7 board
>
>II. OCTI on a 9x9 board, playing to capture all three enemy bases
>
>Each game will be played under a two-hour time limit for each player.
>Robot-designers need not be in attendance in order to compete. For
>the 9x9 games, basic rules apply (i.e., no wrap-around board, no super-
>prongs).
>
>The OCTI tournament is sponsored by prof. Donald Green (Yale
>University). He offers $1000 to the winner of each OCTI tournament.

And is mr Green doing this as a professor of Yale university or as the patent
holder of the game ?

Tony


>
>www.cs.unimaas.nl/olympiad2004



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