Qin Yao stumbled through the explanation of the whole game process.
She didn't explain quickly, but this matched the comprehension speed of the less intelligent people in the community.
Among everyone, Wang Yongxin wore the most serious expression.
This was because many players only vaguely understood the cause and effect, without a clear concept of the execution difficulty of various strategies.
Wang Yongxin, however, was different. Precisely because he was more aware of the intricacies than most, he understood that there were significant differences in the difficulty of executing these strategies.
Take, for example, the strategy of stealing the Wealthy Conglomerate identity in the first two rounds.
This strategy, at first glance, doesn't seem complex and even requires the Wealthy Community to blunder as part of the plan. So many clueless players in the community might feel that luck plays a huge part, thinking that if they had known this in advance, they could implement the strategy too.
But in reality, whether a strategy succeeds largely depends not on its uniqueness but on the details during implementation.
The biggest challenge with the strategy of stealing the Wealthy Conglomerate identity in the first two rounds is the short window of opportunity. One must understand the game rules within five minutes and specifically mislead and deceive the Wealthy Community to steal their thinking time.
Even a few minutes late, missing the optimal window, might lead to an entirely different outcome.
This is normal because once this deception succeeds, it means a change of ownership in the Wealthy Community, and the rewards are too enormous, so the Imitator who designed this game would inevitably impose comprehensive restrictions.
Wang Yongxin didn't find the text trap difficult to spot, but being able to quickly formulate a complete strategy and implement it smoothly after discovering the trap should be rare.
But unexpectedly, the players in Community 4 also thought of it and implemented it successfully.
Even worse, Lin Sizhi and Cai Zhiyuan actually tacitly agreed for Community 4 to use this method to take over the Wealthy Community.
The reason they dared to do this is that they had already developed a strategy of hiding expired investment coupons beforehand.
Moreover, Lin Sizhi and Cai Zhiyuan's plan wasn't just about hiding coupons; it also included 'evaluating cooperative candidates in Community 12', 'setting up financial balance data', 'using Luo Wei to distract attention', and other related plans.
These related plans included negotiation skills with other communities, dismantling various rules, allocating wealth ratios, choosing finance players, and more detailed strategies.
Each individual strategy seemed normal, but when combined, it turned into a smokescreen for hiding investment coupons.
If one only thought of hiding coupons without these accompanying plans for cover, there would be a significant chance of discovery if the data showed too obvious an anomaly.
In that case, it would backfire.
Wang Yongxin never thought of the strategy of hiding coupons.
On one hand, this was because the text trap of 'expired investment coupons not bound by investment rules' was buried deeper than the work button trap, and even those with a good sensitivity to text might not realize it.
On the other hand, since expired investment coupons result in real losses, it goes against the business instinct of chasing profits.
People inherently dislike losses and risks, and someone like Wang Yongxin, who is clear about interest calculations, is even more so.
So most people would subconsciously regard 'expired investment coupons' as a bad thing, a punishment mechanism of the game, and wouldn't intentionally think of it as a unique strategy worth considering and trying.
Wang Yongxin tried stepping into Han Mengying's shoes and realized that even if he was the one, he wouldn't necessarily notice it.
Of course, he wouldn't simply admit defeat like that.
Because no strategy in this game is absolutely perfect, each strategy poses risks and potential exposure or disruption.
Whether it's the strategy of hoarding investment coupons or Wang Yongxin's strategy of using investment coupons to "buy off strikebreakers," all strategies have solutions. In the end, it all boils down to each group's organizational capabilities, execution capabilities, and the dynamic strengths and weaknesses of the three groups.
In essence, it's still a battle of details.
Assuming the three groups of Community 17 gathered for a game, if Li Renshu's group became the Wealthy Conglomerate, the final result might be a 4:3:3 split.
After all, defense is always easier than attack.
After pondering this, Wang Yongxin also realized a critical truth.
Although his group indeed brought back the most visa time, it doesn't mean he was the strongest.
It just means he was relatively lucky not to encounter any opponents who particularly countered his strategy, like another Commoners community specialized in disrupting or a truly tough opponent like Lin Sizhi's group.
Han Mengying from Community 4 didn't perform too poorly in this game compared to him. Her lack of provision for the Commoners community was indeed inappropriate, but the difference wasn't too vast.
Yet Han Mengying ended up returning to the community empty-handed, with her visa time reduced by 50,000 minutes.
It can only be said, she was somewhat unlucky.
Zheng Jie still seemed confused. He hadn't fully understood how the Wealthy Conglomerate identity was stolen in the third round, and now he had another question.
"Wait a minute, even if you could hide investment coupons, expired coupons need the investor to personally collect them, meaning Aunt Zhou had to go herself during hiding and you couldn't do it for her.
"How did you plan so early to take over the Management Room in the 11th round and decide on the specific candidate?"
It was apparent that this question was similar to 'why did Wang Yongxin and Community 4 take over the Management Room in the third round.'
It was covered during the review, and smart people already understood, but for those less intelligent, it remained confusing.
Cai Zhiyuan looked at Lin Sizhi: "Lawyer Lin, would you explain?"
Lin Sizhi thought about it and didn't decline: "This is what makes this game interesting: you can actually deduce the state of each round from the initial state.
"You can even deduce who is in the management layer in each round and how much wealth is roughly controlled."
Zheng Jie seemed amazed: "Huh? That doesn't seem possible. I believe you could deduce age, but guessing wealth?"
Jiang He raised his hand: "Wait, please don't skip the part about age deduction."
Lin Sizhi explained: "In the game, the age structure of players is fixed. After switching the Wealthy Family, the age structures of the two communities swap, maintaining the overall structure.
"Initially, the young, youth, adult, and elder player populations are: 3, 5, 3, 1.
"With every two game rounds, the population ratio changes, becoming: 1, 3, 5, 3, then 3, 1, 3, 5, then 5, 3, 1, 3, finally returning to 3, 5, 3, 1.
"For easy memorization, we can name these four age structures:
"3, 5, 3, 1 is 'Stable Period';
"1, 3, 5, 3 is 'Boom Period';
"3, 1, 3, 5 is 'Aging';
"5, 3, 1, 3 is 'Baby Boom.'"
Many already felt their brains overloading, quickly grabbing pens and paper to jot down and memorize these specific population structures.
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