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Blockbusting (game)

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Blockbusting (game)

Rules Blockbusting is a partisan-game for two players, meaning that the roles of the two players are not symmetric. These two players are often known as Red and Blue (or Right and Left); they play the game on an <math> n \times 1 </math> strip of squares called "parcels". Each player, in turn, claims and colors one previously unclaimed parcel until all parcels have been claimed. At the end, Left's score is the number of pairs of neighboring parcels both of which he has claimed. Left therefore tries to maximize that number while Right tries to minimize it. Adjacent Right-Right pairs do not affect the score.

Although the purpose of the game is to further the study of combinatorial-game-theory, Berlekamp provides an interpretation alluding to the practice of blockbusting by real estate agents: the players may be seen as rival agents buying up all the parcels on a street, where Left is a segregationist trying to place clients as neighbors of one another while Right is an integrationist trying to break up these segregated groups.

Theory In introducing the game of Blockbusting in 1987, elwyn-berlekamp also introduced overheating, an operation for analyzing the theory of combinatorial games, and used Blockbusting as an example for that operation.

The analysis of Blockbusting may be used as the basis of a strategy for the combinatorial game of domineering.

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