[quote name=\'dale_grass\' post=\'192249\' date=\'Jul 27 2008, 03:07 PM\']
Why would you bid $1 in Check Game? The relative error is found by taking the absolute error ($1000) and dividing by the actual value ($4000 or $6000). It doesn't matter who's playing the game. The farthest off you can be (and still win) is $1000, which is 25% of $4000 and 17% of $6000. (Actual percentages vary with actual price, obviously.) The contestant's breathing room has shrunk. Mathematically significant? I'll let the more statistically-inclined to rule.
[/quote]
Tthe only thing that has changed that means anything is the prize value, which means a winning contestant will take home between $6k and $7k in cash and prizes on this game. The argument has been on margin of error, which did not change. There remains a $1000 window, so the contestant's breathing room has not shrunk, nor has he gained any. It remains the same.
As Chris Lemon said (among others), it is a simple game of third-grade math: Figure out what the price of the prize is, and then write a check that will raise the prize package value to somewhere between $6,000 and $7,000, inclusive.
I don't see where this "relative error" has any significance at all in this case, but if someone can show that it has, let him or her do it, and we'll all learn something. The fact is that there was a $1,000 window before, and that value has not change with the increased prize value.
I wish someone had all-time win/loss statistics on this game so that we could run the numbers, and I do know that this is not the first time that this game has seen a change in the value of its prizes. That would help to settle this.
Meanwhile, I'm just going to tune into Season 37 and enjoy Check Game ... and all the others ... as I always have.