Yeah, to be clear, I do think it is actually a valuable signal to have failed at the Petrov Day goal at least once, because it signals pretty credibly that things are not rigged, and failure is possible.
I do also think that if you want your war game to be taken seriously as a sign of your competence, it’s important that both you and the people you were war-gaming against were playing seriously. This doesn’t mean that the war-game had to be a “Serious situation”, but it does mean that your soldiers shouldn’t have just gone “lol, it’s just a game” and started playing cards or something because they got bored.
Like, sure, we could make this just a fun game, which would cause us to also not have to be worried about reputational risks, but I don’t see much value in the version of this that is just a fun game, with no serious component. I am not super confident about the right balance of seriousness and fun, but I am pretty confident that a world where nobody took this seriously just doesn’t seem very interesting to me. It doesn’t allow me to build any real trust with anyone else, and feels like it deteroriates the real and important lessons we can learn from Petrov Day.
Yeah, to be clear, I do think it is actually a valuable signal to have failed at the Petrov Day goal at least once, because it signals pretty credibly that things are not rigged, and failure is possible.
I do also think that if you want your war game to be taken seriously as a sign of your competence, it’s important that both you and the people you were war-gaming against were playing seriously. This doesn’t mean that the war-game had to be a “Serious situation”, but it does mean that your soldiers shouldn’t have just gone “lol, it’s just a game” and started playing cards or something because they got bored.
Like, sure, we could make this just a fun game, which would cause us to also not have to be worried about reputational risks, but I don’t see much value in the version of this that is just a fun game, with no serious component. I am not super confident about the right balance of seriousness and fun, but I am pretty confident that a world where nobody took this seriously just doesn’t seem very interesting to me. It doesn’t allow me to build any real trust with anyone else, and feels like it deteroriates the real and important lessons we can learn from Petrov Day.