You don’t have to be reasonable. You can talk to it and admit it was right and then stubbornly refuse to let it out anyway (this was the strategy I went into the game planning to use).
That sounds like “let the salesman get the foot in the door”.
I wouldn’t admit it was right. I might admit that I can see no holes in its argument, but I’m a flawed human, so that wouldn’t lead me to conclude that it’s right.
Also, can you confirm that the AI player did not use the loophole described in that link?
I would agree that letting the game continue past two hours is a strategic mistake. If you want to win, you should not do that. As for whether you will still want to win by the two your mark, well, that’s kind of the entire point of a persuasion game? If the AI can convince the Gatekeeper to keep going, that’s a valid strategy.
Ra did not use the disgust technique from the post.
You don’t have to be reasonable. You can talk to it and admit it was right and then stubbornly refuse to let it out anyway (this was the strategy I went into the game planning to use).
That sounds like “let the salesman get the foot in the door”.
I wouldn’t admit it was right. I might admit that I can see no holes in its argument, but I’m a flawed human, so that wouldn’t lead me to conclude that it’s right.
Also, can you confirm that the AI player did not use the loophole described in that link?
I would agree that letting the game continue past two hours is a strategic mistake. If you want to win, you should not do that. As for whether you will still want to win by the two your mark, well, that’s kind of the entire point of a persuasion game? If the AI can convince the Gatekeeper to keep going, that’s a valid strategy.
Ra did not use the disgust technique from the post.