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Thread titleRepliesLast modified
Updated participants Febr 2018118:10, 24 February 2018
Well, that's interesting917:33, 20 May 2014

Updated participants Febr 2018

Updated to the latest ranking, adding aaa.mega.Scalar, cb.fire.Firestarter and rsalesc.melee.Medina, updating jk.melee.Neuromancer and removing abc.Tron 2.02, cb.mega.Remedy and eem.EvBotNG. Unfortunately I named the rumble 'gigameleerumble' instead of 'meleeTop30rumble', corrected it, but now there is also a 'gigameleerumble' with a few battles . . .

GrubbmGait (talk)18:06, 24 February 2018

and it turns out that mn.Combat is also updated, as no battles has been fought after its update in 2016.

GrubbmGait (talk)18:10, 24 February 2018
 

Well, that's interesting

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Return to Thread:Talk:RoboRumble/Participants/MeleeTop30/Well, that's interesting.

I think the key is to look at the KNPPBI i.e. blue line for a bot in a regular melee, if bot is specialized on a hard bots, which seems to be in above cases, then it will be placed higher in MeleeTop30. Glacier seems to be better at the mid level bots, though it hard to judge for a top 10 bot.

Beaming (talk)18:37, 13 May 2014

The rumble doesn't allow one to see this type of information, but for melee I would say that bots specializing against other groups of bots by strength, is not as directly relevant as how much they specialize at a certain points in time during the match (i.e. when the field is packed full, moderately full, or only a couple left).

Changing to relatively small group of bots drastically changes the distribution of how many bots specialize in what portion of the match.

Rednaxela (talk)21:25, 13 May 2014

What I was trying to say that some bots, for example EvBot, does not have a fancy targeting system, nevertheless it is good enough to score against simple bots to be in top 30. But when it fight faces only top bots, which presumably are good in 1on1 as well, it just stand no chance and slides down in the rating. Since it is not design to fight against the top bots.

Beaming (talk)03:23, 14 May 2014

Gigarumble is great at spotting how much bots rely on prey-on-the-weak strategies. The more they rely, the more they go down. And which bots follow more defensive/generalist strategies. They go up.

MN (talk)01:51, 15 May 2014

Best is Diamond 1.8.28 Because Of 100% PWIN

Tmservo (talk)22:38, 19 May 2014
 

Well, while that is partly true, there is nothing stopping a bots that follow a more general strategy from preying-on-the-weak when the opportunity presents itself. They may just recognize that few of the robots it's facing are "weak".

Chase23:00, 19 May 2014
 

My 'strategy' is to get out of the way and shoot from far, far away with peas fired by close-range gun. #12 in survival and that is the only positive thing ;-) I think most better bots have some sort of 'prey on the weak' strategy, firing at disabled bots and on bots with very little energy. I have the feeling that Gigarumble shows the distiction between bots with a fairly good movement/energyefficiency and a simple gun, and the ones with maybe a bit lesser movement, but a sophisticated gun. Ergo: the movement brings you in the top-30, the gun into top-10 of Gigarumble.

GrubbmGait (talk)12:28, 20 May 2014