A question about Coryat scoring...
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A question about Coryat scoring...
If you're doing this at home to evaluate where you are, isn't it highly dependent on the players? I've been trying to gauge my performance and there is a huge gap between the episodes available on YouTube with average players and the recent broadcast episodes.
- This Is Kirk!
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Re: A question about Coryat scoring...
No, it doesn't depend on the players because you're only tracking whether you got the clues correct or incorrect. Obviously your home Coryat score doesn't really tell you how you would have fared on the show because you have no idea whether or not you would have won the buzzer battle on any of the questions.
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Re: A question about Coryat scoring...
That makes sense, but how are these scores "normally" determined? If you're watching and somebody rings in and knows it, you may have known it given an extra few seconds, but it becomes irrelevant once the answer is known. I know most questions are either you know it or you don't, but things like wordplay or math or something that can be reasoned is different.
I might be overthinking this.
I might be overthinking this.
- ChexMix
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Re: A question about Coryat scoring...
The way I have always approached it is if I can't come up with the answer before the contestant's I will not count it. If you ever do appear on the show you will need to be answering the questions in real time, which is part of the training process of making your recall and/or wordplay processing quicker.
I have heard of people sometimes pausing the recording after Alex is done reading the question as a way of "ringing in" and if nothing comes within the allotted 5 seconds to count it as a neg.
I have heard of people sometimes pausing the recording after Alex is done reading the question as a way of "ringing in" and if nothing comes within the allotted 5 seconds to count it as a neg.
- BigDaddyMatty
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Re: A question about Coryat scoring...
No, that's a genuine issue. It's an even bigger deal on DDs, where contestants should be taking a few seconds to re-read the clue and check the category before responding. If you're having to worrying about getting your response out before the contestant's, you won't get practiced at doing that. I suggest trying to find a way to record the show, whether with DVR or whatever. The thing is, you have to be disciplined. Get into the practice of actually ringing in, on a clicky pen or toilet paper holder, and judge your Coryat accordingly. If you don't ring in, you don't get any points. If you do ring in and don't respond correctly within ~3 seconds, you lose points. If you don't do this, you'll end up with an artificially inflated score because you'll give yourself the benefit of the doubt as to whether you would have rung in on a given clue.FS7 wrote: ↑Wed Apr 17, 2019 6:54 pm That makes sense, but how are these scores "normally" determined? If you're watching and somebody rings in and knows it, you may have known it given an extra few seconds, but it becomes irrelevant once the answer is known. I know most questions are either you know it or you don't, but things like wordplay or math or something that can be reasoned is different.
I might be overthinking this.
Sprinkles are for winners.
- MinnesotaMyron
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Re: A question about Coryat scoring...
If you don't get it before the player, you don't get it. Jeopardy is a rapid recall game.FS7 wrote: ↑Wed Apr 17, 2019 6:54 pm That makes sense, but how are these scores "normally" determined? If you're watching and somebody rings in and knows it, you may have known it given an extra few seconds, but it becomes irrelevant once the answer is known. I know most questions are either you know it or you don't, but things like wordplay or math or something that can be reasoned is different.
I might be overthinking this.
- Robert K S
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Re: A question about Coryat scoring...
Since I just happen to have the link on my copy-paste clipboard, it's worth reading the page where it all came from...
http://www.pisspoor.com/jep.html
http://www.pisspoor.com/jep.html