January 1, 2010

Exchange

In my experience, skipping a move in Scrabble to exchange tiles is an act of desperation, a functional concession that you are going to eventually lose the game.  Part of that is because when The Wife and I play, we are both very competitive with each other, so missing a single turn is often a big setback.  But it worked out for me this morning:

Him
Her
braze
38
whale
21
whales, dust
22
tabloid, brazed
80
(exchanged tiles)
0
cite, it, at, by
24
tabloids, stomach
74
ahu
18
gnomon
18
clover
36
gelato
8
binder
18
maxes, ma, ox, ne
39
vox
13
ingot
10
frappe
32
toga, so, net
17
dias
21
mean
27
drawn
11
qi
21
fin, qi
25
keno
16
jars
18
fee
6
mi
4
ye, yore
42
ki
6
pea
7
I, I, U, U
-4
TOTAL:
354
TOTAL:
323

The Wife had the same problem late in the game that I had early -- all vowels and no consonants. To do well, you need a good blend of both. I got lucky in being able to make a seven-tile word immediately after my exchange, and thereafter got a better blend -- leaving a vowel-heavy bank of tiles to draw on later in the game, but at that point there were no other tiles to exchange, so we both wound up having to squeeze vowels onto the existing board.

What's more, by exchanging early, there was still a lot of open board for me to place that seven-tile word at all -- it's sometimes the case that you have a seven- or eight-letter word you can make late in the game but there are no places on the grid still available with enough room to do it.

The lesson here is, if you are going to take the big gamel and exchange, it will only pay off if you do it early in the game.

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