Yeah, although it got interesting after a while when some of the systems were well designed and at first sight seemed almost impossible to me, yet the contestants miraculously performed brilliantly. :P
There was one "mini-game" that got me thinking in particular; the design was so simple yet it was so difficult.
The minigame. It's from the show "five minutes to fame".
... Which has a design that, on first sight, I immediately declared it impossible, and the grand final game was even so, which crushed the couples in the first and second episodes.
But the couple in the third episode who challenged the game won over twenty thousand pounds so I immediately gasped.
OK, would you like to guess what format Wordsmith would be? :P
It's not about literacy, and while it aired on several episodes the contestants are pretty surprised when they saw the description - it didn't really match its name.
It's apparently very difficult. What's more is that it's timed and the spotlight is pretty cruel.
Like the show's name states, you have a total of five minutes for five games, and the time allocated for the player is based on the decision of the timekeeper (hence all contestants of this show are pairs of people).
Realistically, a lot of the minigames in that show were practically impossible to me, but the contestants were just too good.
The grand game in the end is, while we're at it, a "top ten" list and the timekeeper (that is, the person who only decides what the player plays) plays instead of the player, who has to guess five of those ten items correctly to win the money.
It's a tricky system too, since you put the more strategically-able person in the couple as the player and the timekeeper probably won't perform well, especially since he has no warm up.
not only is it hard, you're also giving the task to the person who hasn't done anything and probably isn't as good as the player
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
but it was a good show. :P
there were minigames like getting the movie name from the credits (director, lead actor names, misc names) and figuring out which company was hiring from the description, which were all bloody horrible.
and google's docs doesn't have many alternatives; etherpads require self-hosting and is pretty much dead
I'm indifferent about google buying out youtube
surely they could have a different route on their own, but it's its own company for what it is, it's a risky investment for both the buyer and the seller
> 3. Publish a statement about Lichess on a website where you are recognised as who you claim to be. It could be Twitter, Facebook, chess.com, ICC, or anything serious enough. Send us a link to your post.
@ProgramFOX first we'll have to make sure the atomic board is clean, then we can worry about VM experiements or merging atomic into LM eligible title :)
http://www.commitstrip.com/en/2016/02/08/a-simple-solution-to-a-complicated-problem/ CommitStrip A simple solution to a complicated problem CommitStrip 1454953365