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Re: Fouling by Numbers

Posted: Thu Feb 25, 2010 6:55 pm
by daloonieshaman
Just imagine the fun of adding Foul to Piling On ... ?!?

Re: Fouling by Numbers

Posted: Thu Feb 25, 2010 7:44 pm
by funnyfingers
Wow piling on foul would be amazing! Maybe something to offset it would that if you fail whatever you rerolled you end up breaking your leg and get -MA :)

Re: Fouling by Numbers

Posted: Thu Feb 25, 2010 9:47 pm
by plasmoid
Hey Funnyfingers,
I think one of the keys to being a good BB coach is understanding the odds of what you're doing.
Sure you can beat the odds, or they can let you down - but in the long run, they'll catch up with you.

Re: Fouling by Numbers

Posted: Fri Feb 26, 2010 3:18 pm
by funnyfingers
plasmoid - that is exactly my point. I am not testing the odds/fate here. I go for 100% breaking armor. If you follow this chart the odds will easily catch up with you. I just think that an equal chance of being sent off and taking someone out is just not a worthy risk. Even at a minimum I go with a 4 breaking armor, but like I said I prefer snakes will still break.

Re: Fouling by Numbers

Posted: Sat Mar 06, 2010 9:05 am
by dode74
Probably seen by a few people over at CyaBB. The horizontal axis is the assist-adjusted AV, SO is the Sent Off probability, SG is sneaky git, the vertical axis is the probability of the appropriate result (including needing to break armour).
Image

Re: Fouling by Numbers

Posted: Sun Mar 07, 2010 5:08 pm
by mattgslater
Uh, why is the probability of a break listed as the same on both sides? Is it possible that the chart only accounts for DP on injury rolls? Also, DP/SG would need a separate chart from DP alone, as if you were fouling net AV6 and rolled a double-3 (for instance), you would opt not to use DP so as not to get sent off.

Re: Fouling by Numbers

Posted: Sun Mar 07, 2010 5:09 pm
by mattgslater
plasmoid wrote:Hey Funnyfingers,
I think one of the keys to being a good BB coach is understanding the odds of what you're doing.
Sure you can beat the odds, or they can let you down - but in the long run, they'll catch up with you.
This. Risk management is king in Blood Bowl, and managing risk means understanding probability.

Re: Fouling by Numbers

Posted: Wed Mar 05, 2014 6:59 pm
by celticgriffon
Why not just bring back the old rules that a coach can argue the call?

Arguing the Call
Fouls

If your figure is going to be expelled for fouling (i.e. rolling doubles on the armour or injury roll) your head coach may argue the call. The argue the call roll may NEVER be re-rolled.

On a:
1 your coach is ejected from the game and the penalty remains.
2 - 5 has no effect.
6 The ref reverses the decision. The foul is overlooked or the special weapon can be re-used this game.

Each double incident is treated individually (i.e. you could reverse the double roll on the armour and then roll doubles on injury and get ejected).

Secret Weapons
Also, your head coach may argue the call for one Secret Weapon each drive.

Ejected Coaches
A team with an ejected head coach may not argue the calls for the remainder of the match. The team also gets -5 if Brilliant Coaching is rolled on the Kick-Off Table.

Re: Fouling by Numbers

Posted: Wed Mar 05, 2014 8:10 pm
by Darkson
As a house rule I agree - I never saw the point of removing it in the first place, just Jervis' stupid drive for less dice rolls.

Wouldn't have -5 on the Brilliant Coaching though, I'd just count the Head Coach (i.e. the player) as a coach, and if they've been ejected, they just don't count (which is what we did in our Chaos rules).

Re: Fouling charts

Posted: Sat Feb 06, 2016 4:30 pm
by RoterSternHochdahl

Re: Fouling by Numbers

Posted: Sat Dec 31, 2016 12:01 am
by Glowworm
Don't get the numbers and graphs..... but do love fouling (as many of you know) and from that perspective (none mathematical) here's a "variable" you seem to have missed:

What your fouling, and what your fouling with?

Fouling an elf positional on an 11 man elf team with a Goblin on a 15 man goblin team is worthwhile, in fact its generally accepted that its going to happen. If I lose said 40k gobbo but you lose the positional for the rest of the half.... I'm good with that, most stunty players are.

Also, it adds another layer of strategy to the game, I've had coaches stand players up rather than make a block or dodge with another player first as they worry that if the action fails they will have to burn a RR or risk being fouled, so that player is now not contributing to that turn as effectively as he may have before.

just my thoughts, sometimes you need to look beyond the maths and hope there is a "bigger picture" to see.

Re: Fouling by Numbers

Posted: Tue Mar 07, 2017 1:21 am
by Jorgen_CAB
glowworm wrote:Don't get the numbers and graphs..... but do love fouling (as many of you know) and from that perspective (none mathematical) here's a "variable" you seem to have missed:

What your fouling, and what your fouling with?

Fouling an elf positional on an 11 man elf team with a Goblin on a 15 man goblin team is worthwhile, in fact its generally accepted that its going to happen. If I lose said 40k gobbo but you lose the positional for the rest of the half.... I'm good with that, most stunty players are.

Also, it adds another layer of strategy to the game, I've had coaches stand players up rather than make a block or dodge with another player first as they worry that if the action fails they will have to burn a RR or risk being fouled, so that player is now not contributing to that turn as effectively as he may have before.

just my thoughts, sometimes you need to look beyond the maths and hope there is a "bigger picture" to see.
This is so true.

You need to understand the odds but that in itself is NOT the whole story. The fact that the opposing player know you will foul if you get the opportunity might have a big impact on how they play. This is something that is not directly reflected in just probability. If I have a player worth 40-70.000 with a chance at removing a 160.000 player it will be worth a lower than 50/50 odds I get sent out over my opponent, especially if I have a bench to replace him with and my opponent doesn't.

You also use fouling threats for hurting poor stalling plays.