Sisyphus: The Board Game (Digital Edition)

I’m off work sick today: it’s just a cold, but it’s had a damn good go at wrecking my lungs and I feel pretty lousy. You know how when you’ve got too much of a brain-fog to trust yourself with production systems but you still want to write code (or is that just me?), so this morning I threw together a really, really stupid project which you can play online here.

Screenshot showing Sisyphus carrying a rock up a long numbered gameboard; he's on square 993 out of 1000, but (according to the rules printed below the board) he needs to land on 1000 exactly and never roll a double-1 or else he returns to the start.
It’s a board game. Well, the digital edition of one. Also, it’s not very good.

It’s inspired by a toot by Mason”Tailsteak” Williams (whom I’ve mentioned before once or twice). At first I thought I’d try to calculate the odds of winning at his proposed game, or how many times one might expect to play before winning, but I haven’t the brainpower for that in my snot-addled brain. So instead I threw together a terrible, terrible digital implementation.

Go play it if, like me, you’ve got nothing smarter that your brain can be doing today.

23 comments

  1. Ruth Ruth says:

    I won!

    I cheated.

  2. Netty 🐀 Netty 🐀 says:

    This sounds infuriating. Like the single, most drawn out way to wind up thoroughly engaged.

    Ima play it later…





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  3. Netty 🐀 Netty 🐀 says:

    @tailsteak This sounds infuriating. Like the single, most drawn out way to wind up thoroughly engaged.

    Ima play it later…

  4. My game designer brain keeps wanting to add new rules to make it more engaging, give the player(s) more control, etc, but then I remember that’s not the point.





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  5. By crappy napkin math, it would take an average of 143 rolls to make it to 1000. Just to roll two dice 143 times without hitting a snake-eyes is a 1.78% chance. I am too lazy to compute how many of those runs you would need to land exactly on 1000, but you’ll be at it a while…






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  6. Netty 🐀 Netty 🐀 says:

    I just noticed that you and I both misspelled “enraged” as engaged.





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  7. Dude we already did this in Bonkers






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  8. A few people have taken a run at the math, @digitrev actually ran 7000 simulations:
    twitter.com/digitrev/statu…
    Assuming you could take one turn per second, an average playthrough is about 3.5 days.






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  9. Roll three consecutive 7s or it’s back to the torment nexus






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  10. Netty 🐀 Netty 🐀 says:

    Riley took that to school and torment nexused her classmates.






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  11. The goal is not to win, it’s to make others suffer just as much as you are






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  12. The only addition I can think of would be a reminder of the option for the player to at any time accept defeat and stop rolling it. You know, to emphasize that they’re doing this to themselves.






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  13. Netty 🐀 Netty 🐀 says:

    How DARE you bring kindness into this den of suffering.






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  14. I also ran simulations (in Perl).

    10,000 games
    Best score: 160 rolls
    Worse score: 1,029,702 rolls
    Mean score: 112,115
    Std Dev: 112,982

    Not sure why my mean & std dev are 10x higher than @digitrev’s, though my worst is also 10x higher. More games = more chances for bad games.








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  15. Exactly what I was thinking, more ways to make it more futile.






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  16. Just for fun, ran 50,000

    Best: 156
    Worst: 1,402,431
    Mean: 113,605
    Stdev: 113,190

    Definitely a long tail on the distribution — I don’t know enough stats to know if this is the best analysis.








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  17. digitrev digitrev says:

    I probably should have looked at quartiles, since the distribution has a lower limit but not an upper limit, and even a few bad runs can drive the sample mean up crazy high








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  18. Yeah… I did a quick histogram, the game lengths drop off quickly over 100,000, but can still go very high.








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  19. I mean, in theory, a game could last forever.








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  20. True. Though if it does, I recommend you have your dice checked…








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  21. Ishtar Ishtar says:

    Only thing i would like to add is a highest score, nothing like the taunt of hope for having reached higher only to be brought low once again.





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    1. Spencer Spencer says:

      I love the dice animation! Even if it’s length means I have no chance of ever completing. I wonder if anyone will ever complete this without hacking.

      It’s been a while since I dusted off my statistics textbook, so I thought I’d do a proper analysis. The final results:

      – The median number of turns before winning is 8995
      – The expected number of turns before winning is even higher, 12930.2.
      – The probability of winning if you keep at it long enough is 100%! (Statistical model does not include actuarial tables.)

      I include lots of plots and explaination in a jupyter notebook which can be run on [colab][1] or downloaded from [github][2]

      Thanks for the implementation!

      [1]: https://colab.research.google.com/gist/sbliven/472f506c80208f8cfb74aeb4cab29b15/sisyphus.ipynb#scrollTo=eeecbc1d-5c65-4f7e-b6f9-948f1d3d503c
      [2]: https://gist.github.com/sbliven/472f506c80208f8cfb74aeb4cab29b15

  22. Ishtar Ishtar says:

    @tailsteak Only thing i would like to add is a highest score, nothing like the taunt of hope for having… https://t.co/XLfQPRAztK

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