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Bridge Olympiad

You're a member at the National Bridge Club (NPC) and you've got the Bridge Olympiad championship in your sights. You'll choose from a stable of 40 potential bidding partners or opponents, each with an individual style, personality and attributes. Three bidding systems are available and adjustable levels of difficulty make Bridge Olympiad flexible enough for both novices and expert players. With three modes of practice, scheduling facilities for tournament play and computer tracked scoring, you can develop and practice bridge skills ranging from defensive play, slams and playing no-trump hands with relative ease. Tune up on both bidding and playing with a wide choice of computer opponents in whichever setting suits your needs best.

Bridge Olympiad uses both mouse and keyboard interfaces and comes with very short treatises on how to bid, play and score. It includes a glossary of bridge terms as well as a perfunctory explanation of the different types of bridge. ~ Michael L. House, All Game Guide

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Product Details

UPC:
Release Date:1994
Platform:IBM PC Compatible
Genre:Traditional
Style:Card Game

Review

What better person to review a game about bridge than someone who is a relative novice at the game. This seems fitting for a game that purports to be the "finest bridge game ever created" and professes to be a mentor for novice players. With an impressive collection of forty computer opponents and/or partners to choose from, each with different techniques and styles, on the surface it would appear that Bridge Olympiad is deep enough fill the role of bridge tutor. In fact, after playing Bridge Olympiad for a considerable amount of time, it did indeed leave me with a rudimentary knowledge of the game and the varied strategies utilized in mastering the games intricacies. Instead of leaving me bewilderingly baffled at this game of bluffing, luck and strategy, Bridge Olympiad left me with a feeling of accomplishment and understanding at learning something new.

From a novices point of view, bridge can be a daunting experience considering the various types of bidding available (American, Natural and Precision). A short explanation is provided in the manual but suffice it to say, practice and more practice is needed to get a decent understanding of the differences. In Bridge Olympiad, a great deal of gameplay is required before you begin to get a feel for the strengths and weaknesses of the many computer players available. With three modes of play, you get plenty of action. The Practice Room offers you the chance to study the AI players in terms of bidding and playing levels, aggressiveness (deals with the penchant for outbidding a vulnerable opponent, a term for being a game ahead in a rubber-match) and finally "cheating", which in this instance relates to bluffing proclivities, not peeking at others' cards. There are three distinct, useful modes available in the Practice Room including auto-mode (computer helps you bid and play), dual dummy mode (all cards on the table are displayed) and teaching mode (computer evaluates your bid and makes suggestions when it feels you're off base). The next step up the ladder in competition is the Rubber Match, where you and three other computer players rotate and play as partners, then opponents, for eight rubbers (first team to win 2 games). If you're the highest scorer at the end, you get your name in the ego-gratifying Hall of Fame. Practice Room aids are not available in this mode. Finally, the real test is the professional, Olympiad mode where eight teams (with four members each) vie for International Match Points during a round robin schedule that features "duplicate" bridge, where after a game is completed, your other two team members are given the same exact hands against their opponents. This mode is intense, exciting and hard to win.

The game uses a point and click interface and the graphics, for a card game, are very pleasing. Expert players may find the computer players too varied or inconsistent for prolonged enjoyment but for the novice and intermediate player variety is welcome as a way to hone your own personal skills. ~ Michael L. House, All Game Guide

Credits

NameRole
Quantum Quality Productions (QQP) Developer
T-Time Technology Corp. Developer
QUALCOMM, Incorporated Manufacturer/Publisher

 

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