On paper @brave games round 2 is almost laughably simple: - 2 buttons (Up or Down) - Refresh every 12 hours. (Inspired by LOST the TV show, yes I am that old again.) - Target 50/50 But the real mechanic isn’t the buttons. And no, it's not just a tapping game. The real mechanic is: can you move a group of strangers toward alignment when nobody has full info, and not everyone is listening? (Or opposing team listening when they shouldn't be) That’s the complexity. You’re trying to influence people who may not see your post, may not agree with your strategy, may log in at different times, may overcorrect emotionally, or may just press randomly. (Odds are that they would press the first button, the Up/Green one) You don’t have clean data. You don’t have synchronized communication. You don’t even know the true state of the system. (We deliberately didn't show the dashboard) So the game isn't press the button to make it 50/50 math. It is coordination under noise. That’s why it can feel frustrating, tense and sometimes hopeless. (You only have max 6 votes yourself, yet you very much want to have more downs to win the game) With complete information, 50/50 is trivial. With incomplete information and staggered participation, it becomes a moving target shaped by psychology: Do we counterbalance? Do we trust that others will do the same? Do we wait for next update? Do we act early to anchor momentum? And here’s the uncomfortable truth: some won't want to listen and just want to watch it burn. In real systems (markets, communities, companies etc) you rarely get perfect alignment. ...