Difference between revisions of "CANONEXPANSION"

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{{Infobox question set
 
{{Infobox question set
 
| Name        = CANONEXPANSION
 
| Name        = CANONEXPANSION
| Season      = 2019-2020
+
| Season      = 2019
 
| HeadEd      = [[Geoffrey Chen]]
 
| HeadEd      = [[Geoffrey Chen]]
 
| Difficulty  = Open
 
| Difficulty  = Open
| First        =  
+
| First        = May 26, 2019
 
| Announcement = https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=8&t=21342&p=358421
 
| Announcement = https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=8&t=21342&p=358421
 
| Packets      = https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?p=365391#p365391
 
| Packets      = https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?p=365391#p365391
 
}}
 
}}
'''CANONEXPANSION (Creating Additional Names Or New EXtra Possible Answers Now Science Is Only Natural)''' was an open difficulty side event written by [[Geoffrey Chen]], with contributions from [[Vishwa Shanmugam]] and [[Akshay Govindan]].
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{{confuse|[[Canon expansion]]}}
 +
'''CANONEXPANSION (Creating Additional Names Or New EXtra Possible Answers Now Science Is Only Natural)''' was a difficult [[open]] science [[side event]] written by [[Geoffrey Chen]], with contributions from [[Vishwa Shanmugam]] and [[Akshay Govindan]].
 +
It had 6 packets of 20 tossups with [[superpowers]].
  
The set was considered to have lived up to its name and successfully "expanded the canon" - many of its questions entered novel new territory, while remaining accessible to players.
+
The set was considered to have lived up to its name and successfully "expanded the [[canon]]": many of its questions entered interesting new territory, while remaining [[accessible]].
 +
The intentional difficulty variation, with a 30/50/20 split between answers that would be appropriate [[medium part]]s at ACF Fall/Regionals/Nationals, had less favorable reception.
  
 
==Mirrors==
 
==Mirrors==
The [[HSNCT]] site of CANONEXPANSION had logistical difficulties - four teams only heard 11 questions in round 4 for whatever reason. The mirror ended with both "Elitzur-Why Man Bomb" ([[Noah Chen]], [[Sarah Wang]], [[Sam Rombro]], [[Ophir Lifshitz]]) and "Illini Generations" ([[Billy Busse]], [[Andrew Wang]], [[Auroni Gupta]], [[Mike Etzkorn]]) tied for first with a 5-1 record. [[Jonathen Settle]] was the high scorer and had the most powers, while Billy Busse had the most superpowers and the second most powers.
+
The [[HSNCT]] site had many logistical issues. It started extremely late and took forever to resolve [[protests]] and [[rebracket]], did not have enough rooms or [[buzzers]], and four teams only heard 11 questions in round 4 because one moderator read part of the wrong packet. Both "Elitzur-Why Man Bomb" ([[Noah Chen]], [[Sarah Wang]], [[Sam Rombro]], [[Ophir Lifshitz]]) and "Illini Generations" ([[Billy Busse]], [[Andrew Wang]], [[Auroni Gupta]], [[Mike Etzkorn]]) tied for first with a 5–1 record. [[Jonathen Settle]] was the top scorer and had the most powers. Billy had the most superpowers and the second-most powers.<ref>https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=8&t=22603</ref>
  
At the [[2019 Chicago Open|CO]] site, the set was played as a [https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?p=360988#p360988 nine-way shoot-out] that had [[Eric Mukherjee]] pull narrowly ahead of [[Kai Smith]] over the first five rounds. The room was by far the strongest of any field: 47.5% of questions were super-powered and an additional 31.5% were powered, with only 18 gets and 4 questions going dead. Eric, Kai, and [[Kevin Wang]] all got more super-powers than any other player at the other two sites, despite playing alongside one another.
+
The [[Carleton]] site occurred after a mirror of [[2019 Oxford Open]]. The upper room was won by [[Ian Dewan]].<ref>https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?p=358952#p358952</ref>
 +
 
 +
The [[Columbia]] site was held as part of the NYC Summer Open weekend. It was won by [[Daniel Hothem]] and "[[Chris Manners|Christ Manners]]." [[Stephen Eltinge]] was the top scorer and also had the most superpowers and most powers.<ref>https://hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/5846/stats/combined/teamdetail/#t2</ref>
 +
 
 +
The [[2019 Chicago Open|Chicago Open]] site was a nine-person [[shoot-out]]. [[Eric Mukherjee]] pulled narrowly ahead of [[Kai Smith]] over the first five rounds. It was by far the strongest of any field: 47.5% of questions were superpowered, another 31.5% were powered, there were only 18 [[get]]s, and only 4 questions went dead. Eric, Kai, and [[Kevin Wang]] all got more superpowers than any other player at any of the other sites, despite playing alongside one another.<ref>https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?p=360988#p360988</ref>
 +
 
 +
==References==
 +
<references/>
  
 
[[Category: Tournaments]]
 
[[Category: Tournaments]]
 
[[Category: Side events]]
 
[[Category: Side events]]
 +
[[Category:Ridiculous Acronyms]]

Latest revision as of 15:42, 30 April 2021

CANONEXPANSION
Competition season 2019
Head editor(s) Geoffrey Chen
Difficulty Open
First mirror May 26, 2019
Announcement link
Packets link
Not to be confused with Canon expansion.

CANONEXPANSION (Creating Additional Names Or New EXtra Possible Answers Now Science Is Only Natural) was a difficult open science side event written by Geoffrey Chen, with contributions from Vishwa Shanmugam and Akshay Govindan. It had 6 packets of 20 tossups with superpowers.

The set was considered to have lived up to its name and successfully "expanded the canon": many of its questions entered interesting new territory, while remaining accessible. The intentional difficulty variation, with a 30/50/20 split between answers that would be appropriate medium parts at ACF Fall/Regionals/Nationals, had less favorable reception.

Mirrors

The HSNCT site had many logistical issues. It started extremely late and took forever to resolve protests and rebracket, did not have enough rooms or buzzers, and four teams only heard 11 questions in round 4 because one moderator read part of the wrong packet. Both "Elitzur-Why Man Bomb" (Noah Chen, Sarah Wang, Sam Rombro, Ophir Lifshitz) and "Illini Generations" (Billy Busse, Andrew Wang, Auroni Gupta, Mike Etzkorn) tied for first with a 5–1 record. Jonathen Settle was the top scorer and had the most powers. Billy had the most superpowers and the second-most powers.[1]

The Carleton site occurred after a mirror of 2019 Oxford Open. The upper room was won by Ian Dewan.[2]

The Columbia site was held as part of the NYC Summer Open weekend. It was won by Daniel Hothem and "Christ Manners." Stephen Eltinge was the top scorer and also had the most superpowers and most powers.[3]

The Chicago Open site was a nine-person shoot-out. Eric Mukherjee pulled narrowly ahead of Kai Smith over the first five rounds. It was by far the strongest of any field: 47.5% of questions were superpowered, another 31.5% were powered, there were only 18 gets, and only 4 questions went dead. Eric, Kai, and Kevin Wang all got more superpowers than any other player at any of the other sites, despite playing alongside one another.[4]

References

  1. https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=8&t=22603
  2. https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?p=358952#p358952
  3. https://hsquizbowl.org/db/tournaments/5846/stats/combined/teamdetail/#t2
  4. https://hsquizbowl.org/forums/viewtopic.php?p=360988#p360988