Difference between revisions of "Novelty tournament"
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==Examples of Novelty Tournaments== | ==Examples of Novelty Tournaments== | ||
===Subject Tournaments=== | ===Subject Tournaments=== | ||
+ | :''See: [[:Category:Subject tournaments|subject tournaments]]'' | ||
Some novelty tournaments focus entirely on a single subject or set of subjects. Such novelty tournaments include the [[Chicago Open Literature Tournament]] or the [[Chicago Open History Tournament]]. Other novelty tournaments include "theme" packets | Some novelty tournaments focus entirely on a single subject or set of subjects. Such novelty tournaments include the [[Chicago Open Literature Tournament]] or the [[Chicago Open History Tournament]]. Other novelty tournaments include "theme" packets | ||
Revision as of 12:36, 22 December 2020
A novelty tournament is a quizbowl event that deviates from accepted tournament norms. The term was coined by Matt Weiner in goodpackets.zip. Novelty tournaments are frequently, but not always, side events to regular tournaments.
Examples of Novelty Tournaments
Subject Tournaments
- See: subject tournaments
Some novelty tournaments focus entirely on a single subject or set of subjects. Such novelty tournaments include the Chicago Open Literature Tournament or the Chicago Open History Tournament. Other novelty tournaments include "theme" packets
Extraordinary Difficulty
Some novelty tournaments resemble regular tournaments, but are significantly more difficult. Examples include Ryan Westbrook's the experiment and Jonathan Magin's Gaddis tournament.
Small Teams Tournaments
Some novelty tournaments resemble regular tournaments in difficulty, distribution, and subject matter, but are intended for play by teams of one, two, or three players. These include the Jerry Vinokurov singles played as a side event to the 2005 Illinois Open.