猜拳专栏
围绕猜拳的冷知识与历史。
- 🌍
Why "saisho wa guu" doesn't translate — janken variants around the world
Janken looks like a simple three-hand game, but variants stretch from Edo-era Japanese parlor games to Lizard-Spock and beyond.
- 🧠
Janken isn't really 1-in-3 — what psychology says about hand bias
It looks like a fair coin flip with a third option, but human players reveal surprisingly consistent biases — and a strategy called Win-Stay, Lose-Shift.
- 🏆
The World Rock Paper Scissors Championship — when janken had pros
From 2002 to 2009, the World RPS Championship in Toronto crowned annual winners with cash prizes. Yes, professional rock-paper-scissors was a thing.
- 🦎
Janken in the wild — the side-blotched lizard's three-color mating cycle
Side-blotched lizards in the American west have three throat colors that beat each other in a perfect rock-paper-scissors cycle — janken really does exist in nature.
- 🤖
The 100% janken-winning robot — Tokyo's high-speed vision benchmark
Tokyo University's janken robot has a 100% win rate against humans — not by cheating but by reading the hand shape in 1 millisecond, a high-speed vision research demo.
- ⚖️
The judge who ordered "settle this with rock paper scissors" — a real US case
Frustrated by lawyers bickering over a deposition venue, a US federal judge actually ordered them to settle it with one game of rock paper scissors. 2006, on the record.