[quote name=\'Fedya\' date=\'May 12 2005, 09:04 PM\']There were a limited number of main game board layouts in the Cullen version because it would be much cheaper to reuse the same boards over and over. What's surprising is that the Rafferty version used the same layouts. Since they had gone to a computer-generated board, you'd think they could put whatever letters wherever they wanted. (And would it really have been that expensive to write a program to place the letters randomly?)
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Considering the
PYL board wasn't random (yes, I know
BB came after
PYL, but still...), I guess I shouldn't have been surprised. OTOH, maybe they wanted to spread the letters out strategically, i.e. don't put A, B, and C so close to each other. And such possibilities are not exactly infinite, especially if you want to use Q, X, or Z so rarely. Has anybody noticed that:
- Q and Z always appear in corners?
- Between the two versions, whenever a Q or Z came up, it was picked to start the game almost
every time? Doesn't seem so random to me.
- As best to my knowledge, X has appeared only once in Blockbusters history. (Yes, it was picked to start the game as well.)
Last year I worked on a
Blockbusters game (it's been on hold on months), and I developed a way to try to make Q, X, and Z appear only sporadically with random boards (I wasn't aware of the preset boards at the time). Sure enough, I still got two of those letters more often than none.
And as for Gold Run, I've seen the letters BC a lot in Cullen's version, and no less than three of those BC questions referred to a certain game show host who had those very initials.
Computer mice. Rafferty's getting technical on us. :-)