Jules Verne rare entries contest
I would like to invite you to participate in my Jules Verne rare entries contest. It was
inspired by the rare entries contests organized by Mark Brader in various newsgroups, such
as rec.games.trivia. I am grateful to Mark Brader for
allowing me to use his contest format, and for sending me his scoring script.
The purpose of this game is as follows: for each of the questions, your objective is to give
an answer that (1) is correct, and (2) will be duplicated by as FEW other people as possible. More details
can be found in the rules.
To win the game, you need knowledge about Jules Verne, searching skills and good tactics. For example, if I ask for
one of Jules Verne's first names, the answer "Jules" is obviously correct. But it is also an answer that many
people are likely to think of. So if you know, or manage to find out, that Verne's second name was Gabriel,
you can answer that. However, there are perhaps more people who try to avoid the obvious answer, and answering
"Jules" may not be such a bad move after all...
In order to participate in the contest, send your answers to me by email
(garmtdevries@gmail.com) before the deadline.
It is of course essential that nobody sees the answers given by other entrants before the
deadline, so please do NOT send your answers to any mailing list I used to distribute
the questions! Make sure you don't use the 'reply-to' address;
use the 'from' address instead.
Make sure you have read the rules before submitting your answers!
The questions
New questions will be posted here in the future.
Past contests
The rules
1. The Game
For each of the questions above, your objective is to give
an answer that (1) is correct, and (2) will be duplicated by as FEW
other people as possible. Feel free to use any reference material
you like to RESEARCH your answers; but when you have found enough
possible answers for your liking, you are expected to choose on your
own which one to submit, WITHOUT mechanical or computer assistance:
this is meant to be a game of wits.
2. Scoring
The scores on the different questions are MULTIPLIED to produce a
final score for each entrant. Low score wins; a perfect score is 1.
If your answer to a question is correct, then your score is the number
of people who gave that answer, or an answer I consider equivalent.
A wrong answer, or a skipped question, gets a high score as a penalty.
This is the median of:
- the number of entrants
- the square root of that number, rounded up to an integer
- double the largest number of entrants giving the same answer (right or wrong) as each other on the question
2.1 More Specific Variants
On some questions it's possible that one entrant will give an answer
that is a more specific variant of an answer given by someone else.
In that case the more specific variant will usually be scored as if
the two answers are different, but the other, less specific variant
will be scored as if they are the same.
2.2 Scoring Example
Say I ask for a type of flying vehicle described in a Voyage Extraordinaire.
There are 27 entrants: 19 say "balloon", 2 say "hot air balloon", 4 say
"helicopter", 1 says "Victoria", and 1 says "flying saucer".
The 4 people who answered "helicopter" get 4 points each. Since "hot air balloon"
is a more specific variant of "balloon", those who said "balloon" get 21 points
each, and those who said "hot air balloon" get 2 points each. "Victoria" is not a
type of flying vehicle, but the name of one individual balloon, and Jules Verne never
described a "flying saucer", so these answers are both wrong. The persons who gave
them both get the penalty score, which is the median of:
- number of entrants = 27:
- sqrt(27) = 5.196+, rounded up = 6:
- double the most popular answer's count = 21 x 2 = 42:
or in this case, 27.
3. Entries
Entries must be emailed to me personally by email: garmtdevries@gmail.com.
Do NOT send your answers to the mailing list I used to distribute the questions!
In general there is no penalty for errors of spelling, capitalization,
English usage, or other such matters of form. Sometimes a specific
question may imply stricter rules, though. And if you give an answer
that properly refers to a different thing related to the one you
intended, I will normally take it as written.
Once you intentionally submit an answer, no changes will be allowed,
unless I decide there was a problem with the question. Similarly,
alternate answers within an entry will not be accepted. Only the
first answer that you intentionally submit counts.
3.1 Translations
Because entrants may have read some works only in translation, I will
be lenient with regard to foreign spellings of toponyms and proper
names. As far as characters are concerned, slightly different versions
of their names (e.g. Peter instead of Pierre) are acceptable, but
names that are completely different (e.g. Harding instead of Smith)
are wrong.
Works by Jules Verne should be referred to by giving their French title.
3.2 Clarifications
Questions are not intended to be hard to understand, but I may fail
in this intent. (For one thing, in many cases clarity could only be
provided by an example which would suggest one or another specific
answer, and I mustn't do that.)
In order to be fair to all entrants, I must insist that requests for
clarification must be emailed to me, NOT POSTED in any mailing list.
But if you do ask for clarification, I'll probably say that the
question is clear enough as posted. If I do decide to clarify or
change a question, all entrants will be informed.
3.3 Supporting Information
It is your option whether or not to provide supporting information
to justify your answers. If you don't, I'll email you to ask for
it if I need to.
If you provide any explanatory remarks along with your answers, you
are responsible for making it sufficiently clear that they are not
part of the answers. The particular format doesn't matter as long
as you're clear.
In the scoring example above, "balloon in Cinq semaines en ballon" would be
wrong, just like "Victoria" would be wrong; "balloon (e.g. in Cinq semaines
en ballon)" would be taken as a correct answer with an explanation.
4. Meaning of commonly occurring terms
These are general rules that apply unless a question specifically
states otherwise.
4.1 Voyage Extraordinaire
A "Voyage Extraordinaire" is any of the novels published under this title,
including the posthumous ones (re)written by Michel Verne, or any of the
short stories published in a volume of the Voyages Extraordinaires under
the name of Jules Verne.
4.2 Work by Jules Verne
A "work by Jules Verne" is any published text written by Jules Verne,
and intended for a general audience. This includes poems (even though
Verne never meant some of them to be read by others), and excludes
private correspondence as well as interviews given by Verne.
4.3 Character
When I say "character" I mean a fictitious character.
4.4 Movie
A "movie" can be any movie, whether shown in theatres or on television,
or issued directly on video. This excludes tv series, mini series and
the like. Whether something is a movie or a series is determined by its
listing in the Internet Movie DataBase (www.imdb.com).
4.5 Country
"Country" means a nation that was/is independent at the time relevant
for the question. Dependencies are not independent countries. Whether
or not a place is considered an independent country is determined by
how it is listed in reference sources.
4.6 Web Pages
If I ask for material on the WWW, what you cite must already have
existed before the contest was first posted.
5. Judging
As moderator, I will be the sole judge of what answers are correct,
and whether two answers with similar meaning are considered the same,
different, or more/less specific variants. I will do my best to be
fair on all such issues, but sometimes it is necessary to be arbitrary.
I may rescore the contest if I agree that I made a serious error and
it affects the high finishers.
6. Results
Results will normally be posted within a few days of the contest
closing. They may be delayed if I'm unexpectedly busy or for
technical reasons.