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Link #123 |
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Part-time misanthrope
Join Date: Mar 2007
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Took me a while and wouldn't have noticed if they hadn't pointed it out:
![]() Mikamoto: Discarded Q and 9, will bid nothing on the K and ?? (my guess is 2) coins on Nao's 10. Final Hand: AAK10/7 = 1 pair of aces. Kimura: Discarded K, will bid 1 coin on Q and 9 each. Final hand: KQJ10/9 (+J63) = street Saeki: Didn't discard anything, will bid 1 coin on Nao's 10. Final hand: Q10/10/7/4 (+2) = 1 pair of tens. Kanzaki: Discarded 10, won't bid on anything. Final hand: 8/5/5/4/2 = 1 pair of fives. End result: 1st: Kimura with a street, winning 10 coins. 2nd: Mikamoto with a pair of aces, winning 4 coins. 3rd: Saeki with a pair of tens, winning 1 coin. 4th: Kanzaki with a pair of fives, losing 15 coins. Final coins: Kimura: 30 -1 -1 +10 -10 = 28 Mikamoto: 30 -2 +4 -10 = 22 Saeki: 30 -1 +1 -10 = 20 Kanzaki: 30 -15 - 10 = 5
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Link #125 |
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Member
Join Date: Mar 2004
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Being a pig (not having at least 5 cards) just means you are automatically in last. Multiple people can be tied there.
@Eisdrache The 10 seems like someone would want to bid on to deny the obvious three of a kind though? So I would assume that Saeki will have to bid more than 1 to get it realistically. He also actually should have reason to bid on the Q9 to make a full house but I guess he won't realize it is going to make a straight since this is just the practice round (and he's not the smartest of dudes...) |
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Link #126 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2007
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Logically speaking there is no advantage to discard a card unless your "ally" needs it. So there must a reason why Kimura and Mikamoto discarded those cards.
Supposedly Mikamoto wanted to help Kimura to get a straight. But discarding 2 card out of 6 is pretty risky. Mikamoto risked being a pig if she does not get another card to make it to 5. Hence Kimura discarded a card for Mikamoto to bid on as insurance. But why a K? If someone even bid 1 chip on it, she will lose her straight. In fact, why do they even have to discard at all. Their hand is already stronger. All they have to do is to stop the opponent from improving their hand. There must be some other deals going on. |
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Link #135 | |
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99 boys; 50yrs dating EXP
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Quote:
I think the trick Akiyama could be misdirection, but I'm not sure.
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Last edited by frubam; 2012-02-21 at 17:00. |
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