Difference between revisions of "VETO"

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The '''Vancouver Estival Trivia Open''' is an annual [[Quizbowl in Canada|Canadian tournament]] held July at [[Simon Fraser]] University in Vancouver, and currently mirrored at [[Toronto]].  
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The '''Vancouver Estival Trivia Open''' was an annual [[Quizbowl in Canada|Canadian tournament]] held in July at [[Simon Fraser]] University in Vancouver.  The tournament ran from 1999 to 2017, and in its later years was mirrored at [[Toronto]].
  
 
VETO was created by [[Peter McCorquodale]] of Simon Fraser. The first VETO was held on July 17, 1999, and was the first quizbowl tournament ever held in western Canada. It used packets from previous tournaments edited with Canadian content. VETO II used NAQT questions, again edited with Canadian content, and was mirrored at [[Waterloo]]. VETO III used the same format and was mirrored at [[Western Ontario]]. VETO IV, which had no eastern mirror, began the tradition of [[guerrilla tournament|participants writing their own packets]]. Beginning with VETO V, the mirror has been held at Toronto.
 
VETO was created by [[Peter McCorquodale]] of Simon Fraser. The first VETO was held on July 17, 1999, and was the first quizbowl tournament ever held in western Canada. It used packets from previous tournaments edited with Canadian content. VETO II used NAQT questions, again edited with Canadian content, and was mirrored at [[Waterloo]]. VETO III used the same format and was mirrored at [[Western Ontario]]. VETO IV, which had no eastern mirror, began the tradition of [[guerrilla tournament|participants writing their own packets]]. Beginning with VETO V, the mirror has been held at Toronto.
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Because of the guerrilla format, unfamiliarity with general quizbowl rules among new teams, the attempt to include Canadian content, and quirks such as "action bonuses", question quality and gameplay can vary wildly and are usually quite poor, though quality has increased in recent years, especially to other funn tournaments. VETO is/was frequently mocked on [[IRC]] and the [[hsquizbowl.org forums]].
 
Because of the guerrilla format, unfamiliarity with general quizbowl rules among new teams, the attempt to include Canadian content, and quirks such as "action bonuses", question quality and gameplay can vary wildly and are usually quite poor, though quality has increased in recent years, especially to other funn tournaments. VETO is/was frequently mocked on [[IRC]] and the [[hsquizbowl.org forums]].
  
The last VETO was held in 2017. The VETO experience has mainly been usurped by an annual summer HSNCT mirror, MacVanity, and mirrors of Oxford and/or Cambridge Open.  
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The last VETO was held in 2017. The VETO experience has mainly been usurped by an annual summer [[HSNCT]] mirror for those looking for an academic quizbowl experience and an annual summer [[MacVanity]] mirror for those looking for more vanity questions had that led to many of VETO's criticisms.
 
 
  
 
==VETO 2009==
 
==VETO 2009==

Latest revision as of 00:02, 18 December 2022

The Vancouver Estival Trivia Open was an annual Canadian tournament held in July at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver. The tournament ran from 1999 to 2017, and in its later years was mirrored at Toronto.

VETO was created by Peter McCorquodale of Simon Fraser. The first VETO was held on July 17, 1999, and was the first quizbowl tournament ever held in western Canada. It used packets from previous tournaments edited with Canadian content. VETO II used NAQT questions, again edited with Canadian content, and was mirrored at Waterloo. VETO III used the same format and was mirrored at Western Ontario. VETO IV, which had no eastern mirror, began the tradition of participants writing their own packets. Beginning with VETO V, the mirror has been held at Toronto.

The winners in both locations participate in the Trans-Canada Championship Match, using a three-way telephone call between the two sites and a moderator in another location.

In the early VETO tournaments, some American teams participated, but the later tournaments have tended to be exclusively Canadian, with teams from Simon Fraser, British Columbia, Western, Toronto, Ottawa, Brock, and McMaster, as well as teams of alumni, mixed teams from different universities, high school Reach for the Top teams, and freelance players such as Paul Paquet.

A number of prizes are given out, including top scorer (in Vancouver this is known as "West Coast Dominatrix of Relevant Knowledge", or WC-DORK, and has always been Peter McCorquodale, playing solo under the name FARSIDE); worst repeat; best Canadian question, etc.

Because of the guerrilla format, unfamiliarity with general quizbowl rules among new teams, the attempt to include Canadian content, and quirks such as "action bonuses", question quality and gameplay can vary wildly and are usually quite poor, though quality has increased in recent years, especially to other funn tournaments. VETO is/was frequently mocked on IRC and the hsquizbowl.org forums.

The last VETO was held in 2017. The VETO experience has mainly been usurped by an annual summer HSNCT mirror for those looking for an academic quizbowl experience and an annual summer MacVanity mirror for those looking for more vanity questions had that led to many of VETO's criticisms.

VETO 2009

The Eleventh Annual VETO, held in 2009, was edited mostly by Jerry Vinokurov, and as such, it fell closer to common quiz bowl standards than previous incarnations.

The questions were poorly-received by most players, who had shown up expecting a lighter and softer tournament than what had been written. Three teams left the Toronto site at lunch, and there were some reports of players threatening violence to the editor. The discussions about what had gone wrong were angry and inconclusive.

The tournament was won by University of Oregon in Vancouver, TriviaHallofFame plus Philippe Marchand in Ottawa, and Toronto D plus Bruce Arthur in Hamilton. Peter McCorquodale's theme packet was included in the tournament unedited; it notably contained a bonus that required the moderator to hand out vegetables to the players.

However, it is generally considered that the lessons learned from VETO 2009 resulted in the foundations of the strong Canadian circuit we see today, starting with the early 2010s Toronto teams.