Difference between revisions of "Qblitz"

From QBWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Qblitz''' is an online quizbowl company, founded circa late 2018 by Dr. [[Noah Prince]]. It offers interactive online QB tournaments played split up into small pools of players. It also offers a "stat system" which gives quizbowl players statistical analysis, feedback, etc. and is designed to help them improve their game.
+
'''Qblitz''' is an online quizbowl company, founded circa late 2018 by Dr. [[Noah Prince]]. It offers a platform for asynchronous online tournaments that fills a similar niche to [[NAQT]]'s [[Buzzword]]. Qblitz hosts both academic tournaments (its "Challenge Sets") and [[pop culture]] tournaments written by the larger community.
 +
 
 +
==Features==
 +
Tournaments in Qblitz replace the [[moderator]] with a recording of the questions, which is played for each participant locally. This allows players to compete asynchronously: each can hear the question, buzz, and type in an answer entirely separately from their teammates and opponents. The system keeps track of the exact moment when each player buzzed and uses this information to determine who won a tossup. The procedure for doing so is identical to that of in-person tournaments (i.e. "the first to buzz wins the tossup unless they neg"), with a special case for both players answering correctly at [[the end]].
 +
 
 +
Because [[buzzpoint]] stats are tracked for every player and every team in the absence of an opponent, there is nothing stopping preventing a team's performance from being compared to more than one team. In any given game, the difference between playing one team head-to-head or every other team in a simulated round robin is simply a choice in format.
 +
 
 +
There is a "stat system" provides statistical analysis, feedback, etc.
  
 
==Tournaments and Events==
 
==Tournaments and Events==
 
Qblitz played its first online tournament in Spring 2019. [[Benjamin Fry]] became the Season Finale Champion, while [[Anson Berns]] and [[Mark Bailey]] placed 2nd and 3rd respectively. [[Yuti Das]] and [[Ameya Singh]] were the top Middle School finishers in the competition.
 
Qblitz played its first online tournament in Spring 2019. [[Benjamin Fry]] became the Season Finale Champion, while [[Anson Berns]] and [[Mark Bailey]] placed 2nd and 3rd respectively. [[Yuti Das]] and [[Ameya Singh]] were the top Middle School finishers in the competition.
  
===Audio side events===
+
===Side events===
:''See also: [[audio tournaments]]''
+
Qblitz is a natural choice for remote cooperation [[audio tournaments]], a category conceived of by [[John Lawrence]] during the [[COVID-19 pandemic]]. As with other audio tournaments, sound clips are arranged pyramidally and serve as clues in place of spoken text, but now team members can take advantage of the platform to play independently of one another. As the majority of its academic competitions are at the high school or middle school level, these side events are the major use case of Qblitz in the collegiate and [[open]] community. Most tournaments thus far have been doubles format.
The fact that Qblitz relies on prerecorded audio for its questions means that it is a natural choice for remote cooperation audio tournaments, where sound clips are arranged pyramidally and serve as clues in place of spoken text and team members play independently of one another. As the majority of its academic competitions are at the high school or middle school level, these side events are the major use case of Qblitz in the collegiate and [[open]] community.
 
  
Previous events:
+
==Results==
* [[MARCATo]]
+
Qblitz does not currently publicize stats from tournaments, so these tables are necessarily incomplete.
* [[PAveMENT]]
 
* [[Dede Allen Memorial]]
 
* [[PAveMENT 2]]
 
  
=Results=
 
 
===Challenge===
 
===Challenge===
 
{| class="wikitable"
 
{| class="wikitable"
! Year
+
! Event
 
! 1st Place
 
! 1st Place
 
! 2nd Place
 
! 2nd Place
Line 52: Line 54:
 
| [[Centennial (IL)|Centennial]]
 
| [[Centennial (IL)|Centennial]]
 
| [[Jisoo Park]]<br><span style="font-size:85%">[[Centennial (IL)|Centennial]]
 
| [[Jisoo Park]]<br><span style="font-size:85%">[[Centennial (IL)|Centennial]]
 +
|}
 +
 +
===Side events===
 +
{| class="wikitable"
 +
! Event
 +
! Results
 +
|-
 +
| [[MARCATo]]
 +
| unknown
 +
|-
 +
| [[PAveMENT]] (December 7 - 18, 2020)
 +
| "When you were partying, I studied the Bladee" (?, ?)
 +
|-
 +
| [[MIKE]]
 +
| unknown
 +
|-
 +
| [[Dede Allen Memorial]] (October 18 - 27, 2021)
 +
| "Clifford Galiher" ([[Clifford Galiher]], ?)
 +
|-
 +
| [[Pavement II]] (November 1 - 12, 2021)
 +
| "They did surgery on a Moby Grape" (?, ?)
 
|}
 
|}
  

Revision as of 10:45, 3 December 2021

Qblitz is an online quizbowl company, founded circa late 2018 by Dr. Noah Prince. It offers a platform for asynchronous online tournaments that fills a similar niche to NAQT's Buzzword. Qblitz hosts both academic tournaments (its "Challenge Sets") and pop culture tournaments written by the larger community.

Features

Tournaments in Qblitz replace the moderator with a recording of the questions, which is played for each participant locally. This allows players to compete asynchronously: each can hear the question, buzz, and type in an answer entirely separately from their teammates and opponents. The system keeps track of the exact moment when each player buzzed and uses this information to determine who won a tossup. The procedure for doing so is identical to that of in-person tournaments (i.e. "the first to buzz wins the tossup unless they neg"), with a special case for both players answering correctly at the end.

Because buzzpoint stats are tracked for every player and every team in the absence of an opponent, there is nothing stopping preventing a team's performance from being compared to more than one team. In any given game, the difference between playing one team head-to-head or every other team in a simulated round robin is simply a choice in format.

There is a "stat system" provides statistical analysis, feedback, etc.

Tournaments and Events

Qblitz played its first online tournament in Spring 2019. Benjamin Fry became the Season Finale Champion, while Anson Berns and Mark Bailey placed 2nd and 3rd respectively. Yuti Das and Ameya Singh were the top Middle School finishers in the competition.

Side events

Qblitz is a natural choice for remote cooperation audio tournaments, a category conceived of by John Lawrence during the COVID-19 pandemic. As with other audio tournaments, sound clips are arranged pyramidally and serve as clues in place of spoken text, but now team members can take advantage of the platform to play independently of one another. As the majority of its academic competitions are at the high school or middle school level, these side events are the major use case of Qblitz in the collegiate and open community. Most tournaments thus far have been doubles format.

Results

Qblitz does not currently publicize stats from tournaments, so these tables are necessarily incomplete.

Challenge

Event 1st Place 2nd Place 3rd Place Top Individual Scorer
September 2020 Carmel Auburn Hoover Samanyu Dixit
North Carolina Science and Math
October 2020 Auburn Detroit Catholic Central LAMP E.F.
Knoxville
November 2020 Detroit Catholic Central Auburn Hoover Nathan Beck
Streator
December Challenge Detroit Catholic Central Auburn Anonymous Anonymous
California
January 2020 Detroit Catholic Central Auburn Centennial Jisoo Park
Centennial

Side events

Event Results
MARCATo unknown
PAveMENT (December 7 - 18, 2020) "When you were partying, I studied the Bladee" (?, ?)
MIKE unknown
Dede Allen Memorial (October 18 - 27, 2021) "Clifford Galiher" (Clifford Galiher, ?)
Pavement II (November 1 - 12, 2021) "They did surgery on a Moby Grape" (?, ?)

External links