Whenever you become better at executing successful strategies in-game, you’re improving your instrumental rationality concerning your goal of “beating the game”. Already. As is. Probabilities don’t need to be explicitly stated, and typically aren’t.
Yes, of course. But the OP basically wanted to gamify teaching rationality, in particular by providing immediate feedback to decisions in a game setting. What I am saying is that modifying an FPS game so that specific rationality challenges (which reflect what you want to teach) result in gaining or losing power-ups is much easier than setting up a many-people physical game.
Whenever you become better at executing successful strategies in-game, you’re improving your instrumental rationality concerning your goal of “beating the game”. Already. As is. Probabilities don’t need to be explicitly stated, and typically aren’t.
Yes, of course. But the OP basically wanted to gamify teaching rationality, in particular by providing immediate feedback to decisions in a game setting. What I am saying is that modifying an FPS game so that specific rationality challenges (which reflect what you want to teach) result in gaining or losing power-ups is much easier than setting up a many-people physical game.