Champions Declared In AI Poker Tournament
the_newsbeagle writes "The annual computer poker competition has just wrapped up, in which artificial intelligences battled each other over the (virtual) Texas Hold 'Em table. A researcher who worked on one of the top programs, the University of Alberta's "Hyperborean" program, has blogged about this year's competition and entrants for IEEE Spectrum. His first post explains the rules of the game and why it's tougher for a computer to win at poker than at chess; his second post describes Hyperborean's strategies, and the third gives the results and takes stock of Hyperborean's performance."
According to the human players, poker is largely about mind games.
In AI poker, the competitors should be able to send files to each other, or somehow exchange non-game information.
let's play global thermonuclear war
with at least 256 people and see how it goes.
people = participants (not actual people)
I couldn't find it anywhere in the article or links, but how long do these games take to play? Is there a time limit per player decision?
I can imagine scenarios where the whole game takes mere microseconds to complete, or (because I remember the old "start compile and go get some coffee" days) games that take hours.
Anyone find out that information?
By these criteria, I'm the greatest poker player alive. I have no "tells" of any kind. When I look at my cards, I haven't the faintest idea whether the hand is good or bad, so I couldn't tell you even if I tried. With my 10 luck stat and a silver dollar, I am unbeatable.
I believe Limit is actually soft solved by computers, in that it is profitable vs most players in the world.
No limit is difficult to solve vs players who change their gears a lot. Players that don't change gears, you just gotta see their play style and play counter to them. However if I was just going to write a program who played NL, I'd start by just playing my own cards and being conservative. I believe the conservative NL player can still win online.
Poker is a very complex game, but appears forgiving on the outlook because even bad players win occasionally. The trick is to be profitable. And even when you're profitable, you want to keep becoming more skillful because it helps your short term and long term profits. Anyone who hasn't tried this game, I recommend you play in freerolls(never use your own money when you have less than 1500 hours of experience), and work your way up. It is like a long and difficult RPG.
I'm quite good at Texas Holdem myself and I'm profitable over the long run. I've played about 4,000 hours though. If you go with the motto: Never risk any of my own money, and my Holdem Bankroll is separate from my liferoll, you can play. But if you don't respect your money and treat it like gambling, you could destroy your own life.
God spoke to me
This already happened. It was called, "every large poker site on the internet," as they all had bots playing on them.
They were, by large, profitable at low limits playing high volume against mediocre players.
If you'd like to play head's up poker against a computer, it's available at many casinos:
http://www.slotmachinesforum.com/showthread.php?5792-Texas-Hold-em-Heads-Up-Poker-(IGT
Is there non-anecdotal evidence for poker being (predominately) a game of luck or a game skill?
Are any of these programs available for humans to download and play against?
The best computer opponents I've played are in a commercially-available program called Master Poker (which plays all forms of no limit hold 'em with the AI players playing a variety of playing styles), but I've found it quite easy to beat the game by a large margin in all three formats (tournaments, sit n gos and cash games).
I'd love to find a consistently strong AI oppenent to spar with so I can improve my own game, even if it's only heads-up at this point in time.
I think it's fascinating that one of the strategies employed by their bot was the use of non-standard bet sizes. It worked as a way of taking their opponents out of their library (of standard situations), so their play was worse. Thing is, the same thing works to an extent against human players: make weird bets and your opponents have to adjust their heuristics. Some of them may make mistakes.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jonathan_Schaeffer
Best and fun way to play poker is to play randomly. This of course is ruined by greedy gamblers.