Comment by TZubiri
3 days ago
Looking forward to this metric being Goodhart lawed.
Like how the strawberry example was overtrained for, or how the pelican on a bike started being used in official release posts.
3 days ago
Looking forward to this metric being Goodhart lawed.
Like how the strawberry example was overtrained for, or how the pelican on a bike started being used in official release posts.
Magic is complicated. I looked at doing something like this but the open-ended nature where one specific card will completely change the rules or require a series of followup events or modifications to the rules engine at hand is just tremendous.
I was wondering how complicated it could really be, and it turns out that some people showed in 2019 that it's Turing-complete -- meaning that any conceivable computation can be simulated by a MTG game, indeed a game in which every move by every player is forced: https://arxiv.org/abs/1904.09828
IOW, it's as complicated as possible.
Someone made a video based on the paper, if you want to see the cards being used and a little more explanation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pdmODVYPDLA
or, that certain cards when play together make an infinite loop, and so cannot be played/insta-die
There is also this Matt Parker video about MTG, in which he explores a specific three-card combination that produces an ungodly amount of creature tokens.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x3dE-NJ1UDQ
You misspelled insta-win. Infinite turn combos are the best.
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