Jay OTT
Club Cricketer
- Joined
- May 17, 2015
- Online Cricket Games Owned
- Don Bradman Cricket 14 - PS3
I recently started a 20/20 draft league for DBC on another forum, and were at the part where I play out the games, in this case via watching the CPU duke it out with itself and keeping track of the league table manually. It's been very well received so far, but some of us have a problem with the results that are getting played out...
The chasing team has won all four games so far. And not just won them in close contests, but very comfortably too. The closest any team batting first as gotten so far was losing with five balls remaining, and even that run chase never really looked to be in doubt. The other three margins of victory have been 19 balls, 12 balls, and now 35 balls after the team batting first got bowled out for 121, on a pitch that started the game very green but flattened out all too quickly...
The AI is on Legend difficulty, weather has been set to Random - No Chance of Rain, and pitch conditions have also been set to Random, with normal pitch wear. Is the fact that the chasing team is winning easily just a bad co-incidence, or does the AI in this game legitimately play better when chasing a target than when they're setting one?
The chasing team has won all four games so far. And not just won them in close contests, but very comfortably too. The closest any team batting first as gotten so far was losing with five balls remaining, and even that run chase never really looked to be in doubt. The other three margins of victory have been 19 balls, 12 balls, and now 35 balls after the team batting first got bowled out for 121, on a pitch that started the game very green but flattened out all too quickly...
The AI is on Legend difficulty, weather has been set to Random - No Chance of Rain, and pitch conditions have also been set to Random, with normal pitch wear. Is the fact that the chasing team is winning easily just a bad co-incidence, or does the AI in this game legitimately play better when chasing a target than when they're setting one?