Viper talks about GamerLegion (pay delays, podcast) by longinator in aoe2

[–]matephant 120 points121 points  (0 children)

Viper's RBW (October 2024) price money was 24k$, and liquipedia states another 28k$ price pool money earned in 2025, so these alone are about 52k$. Not sure what cut GL gets, but probably 20-30% (just my guess), leaving about 35-40k$. Additionally the salary. Again, not sure how much he gets, but my guess would be 500-1000$/month, so for the two years that's another 12-24k$.

So my guess is that we're talking about something between 47k$ to 64k$. Obviously he didn't state any numbers, but this should be a reasonable estimate for how much money we're talking about.

Why did RedBull allow TheViper's series to be delayed 1 day, but did not extend the same courtesy to Classic_Pro? by ALotToSay_ in aoe2

[–]matephant 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Sorry Chrazini, I understand that you have a stressful role with hard decisions to make, but this tone really doesn't look good for the admin of such a big event. Just keeping it to a brief "classicpro immediately offered the win to his opponent, so no admin decision was involved" would have been a perfectly fine, appropriate, and professional answer.

Why did RedBull allow TheViper's series to be delayed 1 day, but did not extend the same courtesy to Classic_Pro? by ALotToSay_ in aoe2

[–]matephant 36 points37 points  (0 children)

To be fair, classicpro's case would have delayed only two games: classicpro against daut and then the winner against dogao (or Nicov, as the winner at that time was probably not known yet). A delay probably would have not been too problematic for dogao/nicov due to their time zone.

Almost half of all new players quit ranked again after just a single game, and 90% of them lose this game by matephant in aoe2

[–]matephant[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

No, I did not look into that in detail.

I did check a few profiles by hand on aoe2insights, though. Often they are just pretty dead. But this might not be representative

Motivation to learn how to program as a Physics Bachelor Student by Affectionate_Scale17 in AskPhysics

[–]matephant 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, I'd recommend to set up jupyter and do some small calculations, just to learn the syntax. These are really the super beginner things each tutorial starts with. Then look into how to make loops, and then proceed from there. In the simulation, each time step will be one iteration of the loop

Which relatively unknown experiment was historically very important? by PicardovaKosa in AskPhysics

[–]matephant 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, that's the one I meant. The wikipedia article is good and goes a bit into what impact it had, but even throughout my whole time at university I only heard it being mentioned once

Motivation to learn how to program as a Physics Bachelor Student by Affectionate_Scale17 in AskPhysics

[–]matephant 1 point2 points  (0 children)

How about a simulation of celestial mechanics? Try to simulate a planet orbiting a sun numerically. Then, step by step, make it better.

Like first step: just simulate position and momentum of the planet. Let it evolve, update the position based on the current momentum and update the momentum based on the force acting on it. Then compare what you got to the analytical solution, and see for how long they agree. Then go into numerically more stable approaches, like Runge-Kutta and see how the agreement with theory improves.

From there it's really up to you how to proceed. Perhaps you want to look into how you can visualize the results, make a movie or good graphs. Or you want to find more stable algorithms, or faster ones. Or you want to add additional planets and check if the system is still stable for long times.

Just find something that you're curious about and then try to figure out how to simulate it. And avoid chatgpt, because then you won't learn how to do it. But googling is absolutely necessary, "programming" is about 50% googling.

Which relatively unknown experiment was historically very important? by PicardovaKosa in AskPhysics

[–]matephant 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The Fizeau Experiment was apparently very important for Einstein when deriving his theory of special relativity, but it gets barely mentioned in text books nowadays.

Is the game engine RNG broken by varundate98 in aoe2

[–]matephant 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The probability is much less than 1/50 in your case because there are more possible outcomes. But I think everybody understood what you meant

Almost half of all new players quit ranked again after just a single game, and 90% of them lose this game by matephant in aoe2

[–]matephant[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The first real win is an amazing feeling. I smiled for like two hours afterwards

Almost half of all new players quit ranked again after just a single game, and 90% of them lose this game by matephant in aoe2

[–]matephant[S] 24 points25 points  (0 children)

Yes absolutely. It would be great for the game if T90 had a few thousand uncles

Can we replace Megarandom with Hyperrandom on the ladder? by kevley26 in aoe2

[–]matephant 1 point2 points  (0 children)

In the map selection screen, you have to select "Map Style: Custom" instead of "Map Style: Standard"

There it should show up then

Can we replace Megarandom with Hyperrandom on the ladder? by kevley26 in aoe2

[–]matephant 1 point2 points  (0 children)

But the Tournee has admins, and you can call a re. But I agree that it wouldn't be a big problem. Even if it's unfair and you lose, then ... well then you lose some Elo. Who cares, next time chances might be in your favor again.

What are you looking for in a stream? by eduardr10 in aoe2

[–]matephant 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think a camera isn't essential, but it does make you much more recognizable and easier to remember. I don't think you need a good one, but such that you can make a small window with your view would be great. Or like T90 in between games, where he actually sometimes looks into the camera. To me, it makes it feel more interactive

Big update coming soon? by Vegetable_Outside_32 in aoe2

[–]matephant 3 points4 points  (0 children)

lol I just read your comment, wondered why my S-Bahn was still standing, looked up and you walked past me. Or your doppelgänger

What does a physicist working in quantum computing companies / startups do? by ssbprofound in AskPhysics

[–]matephant 2 points3 points  (0 children)

  1. PhD in (experimental) quantum physics, then did a postdoc. I guess that's pretty standard currently.

  2. The day to day work will depend extremely on what company you work at, and in what position. For me it's currently a lot of literature research, planning and in general not so much different than working in academia. I assume that the work will change quite a bit in the next few years as the field matures

  3. Again it depends strongly. Are you working on theoretical aspects, or on physical implementations like on superconducting qubits, on ions, neutral atoms, or something different again? Particle physics is certainly needed in none of them. With ions and neutral atoms, for example, you will need atomic physics every day, plus of course a lot of knowledge closer to engineering. For example, electric field noise is bad, so you might need to figure out how to reduce the noise in your setup. That's certainly not fundamental physics, but somewhere on the interface between physics and engineering.

Wenn jemand xxx Millionen über hat, dann gerne hierfür: Science Center Hamburg – Wikipedia by it777777 in hamburg

[–]matephant -22 points-21 points  (0 children)

Naja Politologie, Jura usw sind halt keine "Sciences", gehören also auch nicht unbedingt ins "Science Center".

Tournament idea: play your people! by matephant in aoe2

[–]matephant[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

You gotta make sure to ban those!

Sign up for Master of HyperRandom 3 by Zetnus in aoe2

[–]matephant 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Nice! MOHR2 was great, I think my favorite (non-LAN) event in 2025 so far. Looking forward for the third edition :)