Fizz, Ister and Ziqual appear to be driven by three different variables: let’s call them D, E and F (Doubt, Envy and Fear?).
Ister gives 50+D
Ziqual gives (D*E). He then subtracts 1 about half of the time, but never if E==1. (Hopefully also not if D==1, but it’s hard to be certain on that side).
Fizz gives Min(D, E) + 2F + 41.
We now have six variables, which makes me suspect that actually these are meant to be STR/DEX/CON/INT/WIS/CHA in some order. I can’t reconstruct which order, though. (Though if five of them seem valuable and one seems useless I am going to be open to the possibility that this is the same winrate calc as in the original D&D.Sci).
The obvious next step is going to be taking the success/failure data and evaluating it based on these six derived variables. Back soon...
A, B and C (the three stats that Bella/Liboulen/Linestra care about) are all slightly positively correlated with one another. D, E and F (the three stats that Fizz/Ister/Ziqual care about) are again all slightly positively correlated with one another.
However, each of A-C is slightly negatively correlated with each of D-F. This is true in the candidate data, it’s not an artefact of how the fairies choose.
My current theory is that e.g. A-C are Physical stats, and D-F are Mental stats (or vice versa), and that these are correlated between potential heroes. This also suggests some faerie politics, with the Physical Stats Caucus and the Mental Stats Caucus pushing for different types of hero.
Most stats seem straightforwardly beneficial to increase. D-F seem slightly more valuable than A-C.
Given that Fizz/Ziqual sound like male names, while Bella/Linestra sound like female names, and our faerie is female, she’s more likely to be in the A-C Caucus than in the D-F caucus: don’t tell her that D-F are more valuable until you figure out her name.
In particular, it looks like A-C have diminishing returns while D-F have increasing returns. Increasing A from 9 to 10 actually might be actively bad. Increasing B/C from 9 to 10 is good, but nowhere near as good as increasing them from 1 to 2. On the other hand, increasing D-F seems to get even better as they get higher (though E in particular looks a bit odd).
Still to do:
Check whether Amy or Holly knows anything that isn’t encapsulated in stats.
Check for interactions between stats: is there a breakpoint on e.g. STR > CON or INT > WIS? We could see the diminishing returns on A-C if they were penalized for being higher than D-F?
Holly’s score is given by the sum of all 6 stats, plus 20, plus a number from 1 to 12. Despite my initial hope that this was a seventh stat, it is not: or, at least, it exhibits no correlation with success.
Amy’s score actually does seem to have some small but non-zero predictive power that isn’t related to stats. I’ve included it in my regression, though it doesn’t actually change my top three list. It does, however, make me suspicious. There are two possible explanations for this:
Amy might be observing some trait of heroes that is not one of the six stats and nevertheless predictive of their success.
Amy might be slipping some quiet help to her preferred candidates/sabotaging her non-preferred candidates. Votes of 1 and 99 suggest that she’s trying to have as large an effect as possible on the selection of Chosen, and so she might be doing something else sneaky.
Current answer:
My current top candidate is #11 (stats of 7-4-7-10-10-7). If they should Refuse The Call, my current second place is #19, (5-2-5-10-9-10, also supported by Amy), and my current third place is #7 (10-2-9-7-9-6).
I’ll tweak the regression a bit and see if anything changes, but #11 is very far ahead of the pack, with the highest stat total and a skew towards the D/E/F stats that are more valuable, so I don’t expect them to stop being at the top.
On further examination, it looks like there are bonuses assigned for the minimum of the three stats A-C (I’ve been calling these the ‘physical stats’) and the maximum of the three stats D-F (I’ve been calling these the ‘mental stats’).
This doesn’t dislodge #11 from the top of the list, but it does move up #2 (whose minimum physical stat is 6) and worsen #19 and #7 (whose minimum physical stat is 2).
My final top 3 is #11, then #19, then #2. (If the fairy in question seems disappointed to see #11, it’s probably Amy, and I’ll recommend her #19).
I appreciate your analysis. It’s was fun to try my best and then check your comments for the real answer, moreso than just getting it from the creator.
Fizz, Ister and Ziqual appear to be driven by three different variables: let’s call them D, E and F (Doubt, Envy and Fear?).
Ister gives 50+D
Ziqual gives (D*E). He then subtracts 1 about half of the time, but never if E==1. (Hopefully also not if D==1, but it’s hard to be certain on that side).
Fizz gives Min(D, E) + 2F + 41.
We now have six variables, which makes me suspect that actually these are meant to be STR/DEX/CON/INT/WIS/CHA in some order. I can’t reconstruct which order, though. (Though if five of them seem valuable and one seems useless I am going to be open to the possibility that this is the same winrate calc as in the original D&D.Sci).
The obvious next step is going to be taking the success/failure data and evaluating it based on these six derived variables. Back soon...
A, B and C (the three stats that Bella/Liboulen/Linestra care about) are all slightly positively correlated with one another. D, E and F (the three stats that Fizz/Ister/Ziqual care about) are again all slightly positively correlated with one another.
However, each of A-C is slightly negatively correlated with each of D-F. This is true in the candidate data, it’s not an artefact of how the fairies choose.
My current theory is that e.g. A-C are Physical stats, and D-F are Mental stats (or vice versa), and that these are correlated between potential heroes. This also suggests some faerie politics, with the Physical Stats Caucus and the Mental Stats Caucus pushing for different types of hero.
Most stats seem straightforwardly beneficial to increase. D-F seem slightly more valuable than A-C.
Given that Fizz/Ziqual sound like male names, while Bella/Linestra sound like female names, and our faerie is female, she’s more likely to be in the A-C Caucus than in the D-F caucus: don’t tell her that D-F are more valuable until you figure out her name.
In particular, it looks like A-C have diminishing returns while D-F have increasing returns. Increasing A from 9 to 10 actually might be actively bad. Increasing B/C from 9 to 10 is good, but nowhere near as good as increasing them from 1 to 2. On the other hand, increasing D-F seems to get even better as they get higher (though E in particular looks a bit odd).
Still to do:
Check whether Amy or Holly knows anything that isn’t encapsulated in stats.
Check for interactions between stats: is there a breakpoint on e.g. STR > CON or INT > WIS? We could see the diminishing returns on A-C if they were penalized for being higher than D-F?
No stat pairs exhibit interesting effects.
Holly’s score is given by the sum of all 6 stats, plus 20, plus a number from 1 to 12. Despite my initial hope that this was a seventh stat, it is not: or, at least, it exhibits no correlation with success.
Amy’s score actually does seem to have some small but non-zero predictive power that isn’t related to stats. I’ve included it in my regression, though it doesn’t actually change my top three list. It does, however, make me suspicious. There are two possible explanations for this:
Amy might be observing some trait of heroes that is not one of the six stats and nevertheless predictive of their success.
Amy might be slipping some quiet help to her preferred candidates/sabotaging her non-preferred candidates. Votes of 1 and 99 suggest that she’s trying to have as large an effect as possible on the selection of Chosen, and so she might be doing something else sneaky.
Current answer:
My current top candidate is #11 (stats of 7-4-7-10-10-7). If they should Refuse The Call, my current second place is #19, (5-2-5-10-9-10, also supported by Amy), and my current third place is #7 (10-2-9-7-9-6).
I’ll tweak the regression a bit and see if anything changes, but #11 is very far ahead of the pack, with the highest stat total and a skew towards the D/E/F stats that are more valuable, so I don’t expect them to stop being at the top.
Sadly, these are also the same top three candidates, in the same order, as you get by doing none of this work and just running a linear regression.
:(
CONTAINS FINAL ANSWER
On further examination, it looks like there are bonuses assigned for the minimum of the three stats A-C (I’ve been calling these the ‘physical stats’) and the maximum of the three stats D-F (I’ve been calling these the ‘mental stats’).
This doesn’t dislodge #11 from the top of the list, but it does move up #2 (whose minimum physical stat is 6) and worsen #19 and #7 (whose minimum physical stat is 2).
My final top 3 is #11, then #19, then #2. (If the fairy in question seems disappointed to see #11, it’s probably Amy, and I’ll recommend her #19).
I appreciate your analysis. It’s was fun to try my best and then check your comments for the real answer, moreso than just getting it from the creator.