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Paper, Scissor, Rock – Do have what it takes to win?

By That's life

So did you beat me?

Chances are, if you’re male, you lost the first round as experiments have shown males have a tendency to throw a rock on the first move, hence, I played paper in round one – sneaky, huh?

Yes, I did my Google homework in constructing this gif. Searching ‘how to win at paper, scissor, rock’ lead to a bumper search result of 968,000 hits, with a plethora of strategies and tips to win. Here’s a summary of winning moves:

  • If competing against a male, throw paper in round one
  • Inexperienced players tend to throw paper on their first throw, so play scissor in round one
  • Copy cat counter move – inexperienced players tend to throw the winning move from their last play. So, if they threw rock, their next move is more likely to be paper, so you throw scissor – Boom!
  • Be unpredictable – when in doubt, throw paper as a surprise.  Average stats are 35.4% rock, 35.0% scissor and 29.6% paper
  • Three in a row – most people don’t want to feel predictable, so typically if they throw a rock two times in a row, their next move will either be paper or scissor. Improve your chances by throwing a rock on round three as statistically they are more likely to throw scissor.

So now you know as much as me, let me know how your next paper, scissor, rock challenge goes.

PS. I find I revisit topics every now and then, and paper, scissor, rock is one of them. Check out my last take on the game.

The less documented history of engineering

By Pot Luck

International day of engineeringIn anticipation of the international day of engineering on 15 September 2012, I thought I’d celebrate the wonders of engineering and take a journey back in time, where it all began. During my research, I discovered that it began with the rock, a primitive chisel and an determined woman.

Paper, Scissor, Rock

By Pot Luck

More Paper, Scissor, Rock cartoons on the back burner (and it’s from one of our subscribers too!).

Ever thought of using Paper, Scissor Rock as decider? Well that’s exactly what Takashi Hashiyama (a CEO of a Japanese TV manufacturer) did. He wanted to sell off his firm’s painting (you know, just your oldies but goodies, like Cezanne, Van Gogh and Picasso). Christie’s and Sotheby’s Auction houses were contacted and asked to make a proposal. It was too close to make a call, so Takashi decided it would ultimately be settled via a paper, scissor rock contest “it probably looks strange to others, but I believe this is the best way to decide between two things which are equally good”.  Both auction houses decided their ‘one’ choice over the weekend.

Christie’s approached one of the company’s 11 year old daughter seeking advice. She suggested  “scissors” because “Everybody expects you to choose ‘rock’.” Sotheby’s applied no strategy as it was seen as a game of chance and went with “paper”. Chrisite’s won the rights to sell a $20 million dollar collection.

Reference, Wiki