Sunday 4 October 2009

The Quest for the Perfect Event

I've been hosting quiz events since January, and I'll let you into a secret! Not all my events have gone as smoothly as I would have wanted, and I'm going to look at why this might be sometimes.

Readers of this blog will know that I think that there should be more to trivia events than asking questions, but today I do want to look at questions themselves, and in particular question register.

I mean by question register setting questions right for my audience. I'd really like everyone to come away from one of my events saying to themselves that they enjoyed it. And that means my questions have to be right for you! If only it were so easy.

First we have the Scylla of easy questions. If I asked for the capital of France, the speed typists would get the answer every time, and knowledgeable people who aren't fast typists will not be in with a chance. Veer too much towards difficult questions, and the Charybdis of Google swallows me, or worse still, the lingering death of hint after hint until the penny drops, and somebody finally comes up with the answer.

I'll never make an SL photographer! I managed to take this photo of Rhea Neiro and Cinna Yaris at Monochrome with my HUDS included. So we also have (clockwise from top right) Rain's What? HUD, Rudi's Green Tool Radar and SEMations AO HUD.

With peak time events like EyeQ and Lilly's 12 noon events, I tend to know the players, and I can at least match my questions with my estimate of players' likely strengths, are likely to know, and I do try to avoid questions where I know certain particular strong players will know the answer. We should not have the same player winning every time, should we?

Early Birds and Night Owls at 11pm on Fridays is much harder. The unusual time means, I think, that people are less likely to come every week, and will tend to come if they're online at that time. I sometimes find myself changing questions in mid-event once I have a feel for the players, and I might take out questions that I think too hard, or too culturally biased, and replace them with easier ones, or questions directed to particular cultures. Since I've been doing Early Birds I've realised that there are some really good players in SL who don't come to mainstream events, but who clearly are smart trivia players. One day I must ask them what they find in SL that's better than trivia. Perhaps I'm missing out on something?

My question register for Cully and my Great British Pub Quiz is,, if course, entirely different. Here my questions should have a cultural bias, with a strong British and Irish flavour. I enjoy writing for this event, because I can use questions I'd never dream of asking at international events. We were really pleased when we ran this event first time to find that so many people came along, and that there was so much interest in a British and Irish event. We're doing another event on Monday 5 October at 1.30pm SLT.

JoshStephen Schism, Lucinda Dollinger, Lotus Ceriano and a zombified Lette Ponnier at Monochrome, sorry [Monochrome]


I'm sitting here thinking that it's just impossible to get it right! When all is said and done, SL trivia is competitive, and it's right that the best players should do well. I just hope that enough of you have fun to make it worthwhile coming along!

I've got some lindeny dingbats for you, but first here's a link to some really annoying Flash games, Semantic Wars and Cargo Bridge. Needless to say I'm hopeless with both, but I don't see why you should not have your time wasted too.

For your dingbats, 10L to the first correct answer in comments, paid in world. Good luck!

21 comments:

  1. Much Ado about nothing
    Plain spoken
    Cheaper by the dozen
    Run Cross Country
    Reverse the Charge

    I'll stop there...

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  2. Much Ado about nothing yes
    Cheaper by the dozen yes
    Cross country run sort of yes
    Reverse the charge isn't what I was looking for but I like it!

    Plain spoken no

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  3. What am I on about? Reverse the charge is dead right!

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  4. Too many cooks spoill the broth
    Five O'clock shadow
    Wide eyed
    Mudslide

    You can move (say for example) jewellery into the correct position on your avatar by right clicking and editing. You can also do exactly the same thing with the HUDs on your screen.

    I don't have Rain's "teh" HUD, but on a typical Ana SL interface you have the AO and radar HUDs discreetly positioned in the bottom corners leaving me (more or less) free rto take screen shots as I go.
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/41458134@N07/3980465372/sizes/l/

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  5. Too many cooks and 5 o'clock shadow are right!

    The HUD thing wasn't a positioning problem. Mako found a lucky chair giving out a camera gadget he wanted and was summoning his friends and his army of alts to cycle through the letters. To set it up I had to click show HUDs in snapshots, and I left it one.

    Rain's What? HUD is a gadget that tells you who talking objects belong to.

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  6. Outspoken?

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  7. Eyed from a distance?

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  8. Outspoken yes! Eyed from a distance sorry :) That one is hard I think.

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  9. the amazon one... Old Man River?

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  10. crosseyed?

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  11. No! It's nothing to do with eyes.

    And the mud one is still alive too!

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  12. Mark007 Bloobury4 October 2009 at 19:22

    mudflat

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  13. Yes Mark! Just the eyey one left, it's not got eye in the answer.

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  14. OK here's a clue, the answer is South African.

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  15. Mark007 Bloobury4 October 2009 at 23:24

    Wow - that last one WAS tough - wd, Becki

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  16. Oh, I REALLY wish you hadn't put those game links in there... :/

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  17. Oh, and I never realized that you were adjusting your questions on the fly for the crowd. Makes me even more impressed than I used to be. :)

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