Somewhat confused at the points I get from solving different puzzles. Does the number of people explicitly marked "Innocent" change the score you get, if the times are otherwise the same?
Scoring model
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Correct - and we will soon be updating the scoring algorithm to more accurately reflect real-world solving averages (right now it's just our system's "best guess" determining how difficult a particular puzzle is). Luckily the site has been popular enough that we're getting tons of real-world solving data really quickly - usually it takes up to a year before we can update the scoring algorithm off actual solve data.If you enjoy our puzzles, please consider upgrading to a premium account to remove all ads and help support us financially. Thanks for your support!
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More often I see people posting their scores and I just don't understand but I seem to get a lot less points than other people very often.
It also seems like it depends on the time of day, as sometimes I constantly get 300+ points for easy completions, and sometimes I keep getting 190 points for a 30 second complete at a decently hard puzzle.
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More often I see people posting their scores and I just don't understand but I seem to get a lot less points than other people very often.
It also seems like it depends on the time of day, as sometimes I constantly get 300+ points for easy completions, and sometimes I keep getting 190 points for a 30 second complete at a decently hard puzzle.Comment
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Ah ok thanks for the explanation. Makes sense then why the scores are so different, because the average solution time is very highly impacted at every complete with such a small completion rate.
Feels a bit unsatisfying getting very low scores for what feels like quick solves, but I understand it's very hard to create a well working scoring system with different puzzle difficulties in the mix.Comment
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Again just to reiterate: the scoring system (for points) is currently just a placeholder that is about to be swapped out with a more intuitive system. All our puzzle sites score results in comparison to previous solves. The problem is that Conspiracy Puzzles are too new to have sufficient solve data to base this sort of scoring system on, so right now the interim algorithm has to make a lot of assumptions and can occasionally throw up seemingly strange scores. This will all be fixed in the next update.If you enjoy our puzzles, please consider upgrading to a premium account to remove all ads and help support us financially. Thanks for your support!
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