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Tennis is an (abstract) strategic pencil and paper game for two players.
Contents
The game field consists of 4 fields and a centre line. These are called (-2,-1,0,1,2), with negative numbers belonging to player 1, positive to player 2. At start, the ball is at the centre line (0).
Both players start with the same initial number (e.g. 50 points). In each draw, both players choose a number, and the ball is moved towards the player with the smallest number. The number that was chosen reduces the points for the next draws.
The aim of the game is to move the ball beyond the second field of the opponent.
The game is described in.
Mathematical description
For a simple description, we include the numbers -3 and 3 to denote the ball being beyond the second field. This results in a playfield as (-3,-2,-1,0,1,2,3).
The draw of player i at time t will be denoted as
At start is
Each player chooses a whole number
The ball is moved as follows:
For the result of the game, the following rules apply:
Example games
In the first example, player one wins, but the ball is still on the playfield when both players do not have any points left.
In the second example, player 1 wins again, by hitting the ball beyond the other playfield using the last points he has left.
Footsteps
A similar game is Footsteps, marketed at one time as Quo Vadis by Invicta. Typically, players face each other at opposite ends of a "board" that is a simple row of seven spaces, with a single token initially on the center space. Each player starts with 50 points. On successive turns, each writes down a number; the players compare numbers and the player with the higher number advances the token one space toward the opponent. The winning "bet" is deducted from the winner's point total; each "bet" must be between 1 and the player's remaining points. The winner is the first to reach the space nearest the opponent—in other words, to win three more turns than the opponent.
Footsteps closely resembles Tennis, but does not treat the center space as a "net" to be skipped over; each move consists of one step, never two. Both games have been investigated as examples for developing optimal play strategies by artificial intelligence.