Frustrating Scrabble

Jan 17, 2009 13:19

I'm having one of the most frustrating Scrabble games of my life.

Owing to some bug in Scrabble Worldwide, instead of a game with megamole , it set me up with someone else.  As the other person seemed quite happy to play, I decided to continue with the game.

She's an absolutely terrible player (14% wins in 157 games), though I realised she was bad from her ( Read more... )

scrabble

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emmzzi January 17 2009, 14:28:16 UTC
I'm not sure 'not playing the way I like to' = "terrible player!" frustrating, I'll give you...

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watervole January 17 2009, 14:34:17 UTC
I carefully defined her in terms of the game as a whole. Anyone who has lost 86% of over 150 games can safely be defined as terrible.

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emmzzi January 17 2009, 15:14:01 UTC
I don't think we'll agree on this one as I think 'bad' is subjective. So, I can cope with 'I find her a bad player', or 'I find her a frustrating player'; but not 'she is (objectively) bad.' (or absolutely terrible.) as in, I think it, therefore it is.

There may be learning problems, dyslexia, a totally different motivation to you for playing the game which make her, in her mind, wonderful; and winning, having lots of long and interesting words, whatever, may not be her motivation!

But, I'll agree to differ! And I hope your next few moves with her enable you to get enjoyment out of the game.

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watervole January 17 2009, 16:36:26 UTC
Let's say then, that I find her an unskilled player.

Now I've opened up the board, it's a whole new game. I'm 80 points in the lead and lots of space to play in.

Dyslexia isn't really an issue in Scrabble, you can use the ingame spellchecker to check a word is valid before you play it. There's an on-screen list of valid two-letter words to give you a hand.

I don't think she's stupid, some of her moves aren't bad at all. I suspect half her problem is that she puts down the first word that comes to mind without looking to see if there's a better one.

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gaspode January 18 2009, 00:10:34 UTC
The problem with dyslexia and scrabble (aside from the fact i believe it's in the rules that you can't check words until after you have played them whatever the online version seems to think) is that dyslexia is not just bad spelling (in fact yes, scrabble can help bad spellers) - although thats a big part, the real issue is that i just can't see words from a jumble of letters - my mind (the diagnosed dyslexic part) just doesn't make the conection with the tiles on the rack, it certainly nothing to do with my vocab, its simply something my mind will not do - and i've tried.

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watervole January 18 2009, 09:27:30 UTC
The online version comes with two options. you can play what they call a 'challenge' game where you aren't allowed to check words before playing them, and 'regular' where you are allowed to keep on trying until you get a word spelt correctly.

I've no idea if my opponent is badly dyslexic, but if she is, I would have thought that she wouldn't be keen enough on Scrabble to have played over 160 games?

For mild dyslexics like my youngest son, there's a still a game to play even with poor spelling. Henry (and Richard) both play better tactics than I do, even though I have better word knowledge. Their ability to spot a way of playing a high scoring letter on a bonus square means they will often find a better move than I will - even though the Scrabble program will reject many incorrect spellings.

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megamole January 17 2009, 17:39:53 UTC
No, but playing so as not to score any points...

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watervole January 17 2009, 19:01:31 UTC
There's two exposed triple word scores. One should be staggeringly easy to play on. Instead, she did a move for nine points that opened up another triple word score. I'm a hundred points ahead now that I've opened up the board properly.

It's frustrating. First because it was hard to play well, now because there's no sense of competition.

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