I have often wondered what would happen if you give 2 players the same heroes and player card deck along with an encounter deck, where each deck has the cards arranged in the same order. Of course these decks would be arranged by a third party, since players should not know the order of cards, but they should be familiar with what cards are in the deck. The decks are not shuffled prior to the game. Each player will draw the same 7 cards and cards off the encounter deck will be the same, unless something alters the flow. The player card deck would also need to have no cards that require the deck to be shuffled, and a scenario would have to be chosen that does not require the encounter deck to be shuffled either. Ideally each player would play in a different areas, so they could not see each others games. To really get the most out of the experiment each player would write down a play by play account of the game, or the games could be filmed and analyzed later.
So, why would this be interesting?
Well, my main question is do players make the same choices when faced with the same circumstances? Basically are we robots playing this game, or do we each make different choices that when added up alter the course of the game dramatically. Of course to take this one step further, it would be cool to see the difference in choices amongst experienced and beginner players, and we probably would see a difference there. But if we took 2 players that are experienced with the mechanics of a scenario and the player cards in the deck, will there be a difference? And if so what choices were made and how did it influence the outcome.
Sorry that the scientist in me is coming out, but i think it would be neat to see. Unfortunately i do not play Octgn, since it seems like that would be easiest place to set this up if a third player was willing to organize the decks. Doing it with actual cards takes a bit more investment.
Anyway, if anyone ever tries this post it here, i am real curious to hear or see what happened, or if anyone has the mad scientist syndrome like me, and wants to try it out with me we can figure it out how to make it work. We might even be able to post the results in the Journal of Applied Psychology. Ha!