Global Player Ranking

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11 comments, last by Stroppy Katamari 12 years ago

Chess uses the ELO-rating system (and many other games). It works really well in PvP games with matchmaking - the rating is accurate in reflecting the players relative skill compared to other players. As I've stated in OP though, the ELO-rating system is not really what I'm looking for.


I didn't mean to say "use whatever Chess uses".

I meant to say "there are probably many discussions about Chess rating systems over the years. it might be useful to see what have been discussed, what alternatives to the ELO-rating systems have been proposed, and why they have stuck to ELO".

Edit: Oops, sorry, I didn't realize it was for a singleplayer game lol. tongue.png
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This conflicts with your requirements in that points can go down. That said, it only happens when someone beats the track record, the negative effect on points is small and gets smaller over time (because the record can't be improved by that much). For example, when track record improves from 82 to 80 seconds on a level with 100 max points, someone whose personal record time was 94 seconds and had 87 ranking points from the level will still have 85 ranking points afterwards.


Normally I would agree, however if it's possible for someone to cheat (e.g. finishes the level in 2 seconds) then it may have a more substantial effect.

[quote name='Stroppy Katamari' timestamp='1336904399' post='4939741']
This conflicts with your requirements in that points can go down. That said, it only happens when someone beats the track record, the negative effect on points is small and gets smaller over time (because the record can't be improved by that much). For example, when track record improves from 82 to 80 seconds on a level with 100 max points, someone whose personal record time was 94 seconds and had 87 ranking points from the level will still have 85 ranking points afterwards.


Normally I would agree, however if it's possible for someone to cheat (e.g. finishes the level in 2 seconds) then it may have a more substantial effect.
[/quote]That actually occurred to me, but no score system withstands cheating that obvious. It has to be stopped.
In this ranking system, just having the cheater pop up doesn't mess anything up permanently. Because the points are determined dynamically and not just adjusted, wiping the cheater's track record would immediately restore the point situation to correct state for everyone else.

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