On the Trail of Lost Pennies

09/15/2022
by   Alan Hammond, et al.
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We introduce a two-person non-zero-sum random-turn game that is a variant of the stake-governed games introduced recently in [HP2022]. We call the new game the Trail of Lost Pennies. At time zero, a counter is placed at a given integer location: X_0 = k ∈ℤ, say. At the i-th turn (for i ∈ℕ_+), Maxine and Mina place non-negative stakes, a_i and b_i, for which each pays from her own savings. Maxine is declared to be the turn victor with probability a_ia_i+b_i; otherwise, Mina is. If Maxine wins the turn, she will move the counter one place to the right, so that X_i = X_i-1 +1; if Mina does so, the counter will move one place to the left, so that X_i = X_i-1 -1. If lim inf X_i = ∞, then Maxine wins the game; if lim sup X_i = -∞, then Mina does. (A special rule is needed to treat the remaining, indeterminate, case.) When Maxine wins, she receives a terminal payment of m_∞, while Mina receives n_∞. If Mina wins, these respective receipts are m_-∞ and n_-∞. The four terminal payment values are supposed to be real numbers that satisfy m_∞ > m_-∞ and n_∞ < n_-∞, where these bounds accord with the notion that Maxine wins when the counter ends far to the right, and that Mina does so when it reaches far to the left. Each player is motivated to offer stakes at each turn of the game, in order to secure the higher terminal payment that will arise from her victory; but since these stake amounts accumulate to act as a cost depleting the profit arising from victory, each player must also seek to control these expenses. In this article, we study the Trail of Lost Pennies, formulating strategies for the two players and defining and analysing Nash equilibria in the game.

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