
Seven Games: A Human History

Or, put more succinctly: a game is “the voluntary attempt to overcome unnecessary obstacles.”
Oliver Roeder • Seven Games: A Human History
Games remain necessities of life today. For one thing, they’re fun. They activate and satisfy psychological desires. Pleasure derives from immersing oneself in games’ worlds, or in improving one’s skills, or in benefiting from their systems of chance. The real world may from time to time offer us a chance to solve an elegant problem, and the satisf
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There is nothing explicit in the rules of Go that says a group of stones with two eyes can’t be captured. Rather, that fact arises solely from subtle interactions of the game’s atomic parts. It’s no accident, therefore, that life and death are themselves core concepts in the game. Stones are said to be alive when they can never be captured, like th
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The boom-and-bust cycles of games have a lot to do with how much luck is involved in their play: the more randomness, the longer the cycle—the longer people can keep convincing themselves that they have a chance to win. The chess boom, sparked by Fischer’s win in 1972, while fierce, was short, fizzling within a couple of years. In chess, one faces
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The true motivation of a computer scientist developing a game-playing AI is not dissimilar to that of a parent spending valuable time and energy raising a child. It is an act of creation. Mary Shelley’s Dr. Frankenstein, upon contemplating his creature, said, “A new species would bless me as its creator and source; many happy and excellent natures
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But I wondered about the toll of a life devoted to dice, to randomness. Mochy took a dispassionate view: that the mathematics are sound and that chance, given a chance, becomes a certainty. “I always say it this way: it’s like playing roulette,” he said, comparing himself to the extra numbers on the wheel that give the casino an advantage. “And in
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The Deep Blue team was asked by the corporate PR division to dress well and not smile during the closing ceremony—in deference, apparently, to the human race. The day after the match, IBM’s stock price soared to a ten-year high.