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Báo cáo lỗi dịch thuật
Ingame though, the computer is... Terrible. There really isn't a difference in dice rolls. The computer plays by the exact same rules you do once you are ingame. However the AI is completely idiotic. They can't use certain skills like Leap, they use Minotaurs as running backs, they don't prioritize their actions properly, they don't make good use of their rerolls, they "Go For It" much much more than a human player should, they cage up as teams that really shouldn't be relying on caging tactics, and they don't seem to have a very good grasp of calculating odds of rolling dice for multiple actions at once (like attempting to dodge past an entire team).
Because of all that, it really isn't all that uncommon for me to kill or injure enough players on the enemy team that they can barely cover the line of scrimage after a kickoff. I've actually had a few games where the computer had only 5 players left uninjured at the end because the computer places their players in such bad positions.
Humans are /terrible/ at understanding probabilities and statistics though :) We all fall prey to it
After playing 3 matches, tried 4 fouls in total, and got 4 doubles, one for each foul I tried.
Try to explain this with probabilities and statistics... and this is just one example.
(Obviously, I'm still waiting to see the computer getting a double when it tries a foul)
(and the chance of rolling doubles 4 times in a row, is 1 in 1296 FYI. Unlikely, but that doesn't mean it can't happen)
From another post, I made on the exact topic.
Here's a few things at play:
1: We expect patterns. Flip a coin 10 times. Turned up heads 10 in a row? It's common to assume that "Im on a streak" or "it's got to be tails this time" (game shows and casinos basically rely on that feeling), but the next coin flip is still exactly 50/50.
2: We remember the crazy situations and forget the normal. We don't flinch when a 3+ roll works, because we expect it to. But when we blow a 2+ catch, we cry foul because it "should have worked"
3: The AI is dumb and will try crazy things. Sometimes those crazy things will work. This triggers our suspicion that something is wrong, because a human wouldn't have tried it. But the AI also blows its turn often, trying a stupid move.
4: Dice average out, over a long interval. If I roll 1200 times, I'd expect to get somewhere near 200 of each result. But if I wrote all 1200 rolls in one long line, and then took a random block of 10 numbers from the middle, that block may have five 6's in it.
5: The more dice rolled, the bigger the chaos factor. Let's say that every 5 or 6 dice rolls has a 1 or 2% chance of something completely crazy happening.
How many dice are rolled i na blood bowl game? Probably 200. How many games do you play in a week ?
And most important: Those things do not happen when playing against another human player.
So it´s not a problem of "selective memory".
The computer is so brain-dead easy to beat that in about 100 matches I've played vs it, I've only lost about 3, and all 3 of those matches were as a Vampire team. There are actually mods that are designed to make the computer play better, but how well they work is debatable.
If anything, the game is mostly stacked against the computer in the actual match, as they can't properly make use of certain skills, can't prioritze actions in a sensible order sometimes, and seem quite lacking in figuring out the probability of failure for actions that would require multiple dice rolls (like dodging past 3 player's tackle zones). Simply put, the computer will frequently make mistakes that no sane player with a good grasp of the rules would ever make.
Quit whining about you having a few bad dice rolls. Either you are just imagining it, or you are taking too many risks and not prioritizing your actions properly. If its so bad, just get 1 more reroll than you would otherwise get.
I have played against human players, and guess what?, my luck suddenly changes.
So quit coming here to give lessons, you don´t seem to be capable of it.
Blood bowl cheats in the same way that your PC dispenses honey. That is, not at all.
It's perception.
Extras & Settings
-> Options
-> Log background minimal opacity, adjust the setting to the max towards the right
This will make all the d6 rolls the computer makes (including the rolls your players make, AI player rolls, as well as human opponent rolls) visible. In-game, you will now see a text box in lower left corner of the screen. The chat bubble icon will show the chat log. The other icon will show the game actions log, which displays die roll results and a lot of modifier information. Following this after pretty much every action will help you a lot to stay on track of what the hell is actually going on in terms of die rolls and game mechanics.
When you see die rolls, there is less "gut feeling" involved; and more obervation of what actually happens in the game.