@ItIsILeClerc:
Hmmm, I 'd consider a 60/40 advantage for any side in any game as way too good (for that 60 side). Broken beyond repair, even.
There is this game I like to play, and with the two most popular first moves, the spread over the course of history is the following:
1. e4: White wins 39.2%, Black wins 32.6%, Draw 28.2% = 53.3% / 46.7% spread.
1. d4: White wins 39%, Black wins 29.5%, Draw 31.5% = 54.75% / 45.25% spread.
And yet, people have been playing chess for a long time now, without constantly complaining that the game is broken. :wink:
I’m sorry, but bidding should be a 100% equalizing process for most Axis & Allies games. If the results are still 60/40 after the bidding, that means that people aren’t bidding right. That, or there is just more propensity to play one side more accurately than the other. This does NOT denote a flaw in the game, but rather a flaw in the play.
I’m still learning, and quite frankly it seems to me like it takes a lot more creativity to be successful with the Allies than with the Axis. So, I will contend that it takes a better player to be consistently good with Allies. But, if you are not good at both sides equally (and few are), comparative statistics are not going to give you the information you need.
The only way to truly get those statistics from league play would be to play a match with one game from each side with the same bid amount for each game within the match. Then if you still see a very skewed result, then it is due to an imbalance.
But even then, it is a difficult proposition to tell how much of the imbalance is due to the game and how much is due to the players.