The perfect balance of readability and formalism. Joel Watson has refined his successful text to make it even more student-friendly. A number of sections have been added, and numerous chapters have been substantially revised. Dozens of new exercises have been added, along with solutions to selected exercises. Chapters are short and focused, with just the right amount of mathematical content and end-of-chapter exercises. New passages walk students through tricky topics.
I’m Joel Watson. I live in a suburb of a suburb of Dallas, TX with my wife, daughter and two cats, Tivo and Replay. I’ve been professionally unemployed as an artist since 2008. I travel to a dozen or so comic conventions each year, and once I took a shot of maple bacon tequila out of a Cadbury Creme Egg. I called it a “Sadbury Egg.” It was delicious.
Hijinks Ensue is a semi-autobiographical comic about a lifelong geek and aspiring artist who turns his back on an unfulfilling, but financially stable career in order to pursue art full time and set a better example for his daughter. It’s created by me, Joel Watson, and it currently updates Monday/Wednesday/Friday. I say “semi-autobiographical” because the core elements of the stories in HijiNKS ENSUE are true: I DID start a comic in order to show my newborn daughter that life was more about creating art and happiness and less about creating wealth (read more about that in “The Experiment”), and I DID get fired from my job for completely losing interest in it once my comic starting taking off, and most of the characters ARE based on and named after my family and friends, but most of the specifics are at least 50% fictional in order to make things more interesting.
Really enjoyed reading this book. It is written in way that is well paced to help readers understand concepts at an easy pace, and also has some humorous moments too! Questions are provided at the end of each chapter to practice and perfect your understanding. A strategy book that doesn't require a stressful strategy to read it!!
(This is a subject I’ve been trying to learn more about because I think game theory can shape how we view interactions and decisions in competitive sports. As a result, I only skimmed many sections taht weren’t at least somewhat related to zero-sum competitive games.) This book, as its title indicates, is an introductory textbook that would be useful for students that aren’t necessarily well-versed in the logic and math that game theory relies on. I found it incredibly helpful in explaining concepts but also in explaining some common symbols and variables that other texts either don’t use or use without explaining. In that sense, the book sits in a space that many advanced novices will appreciate. It contains a wide variety of topics, both basic and advanced, and explains those topics using multiple examples. The appendices are helpful as well.
Did anyone of you search for game theory and find this book after seeing the last episode of Prison Break? Just what I thought. This was really not what I was expecting. But despite being a profoundly non-mathematical person (and not understanding the better half of this book with all of its formulae), I could still grab some useful informations on marketing and political positioning.
A good bridging book to more advanced game theory, with careful explanation and intuition. Besides that, I’m not a big fan of his Bayesian Nash Equilibrium part. Nevertheless, it is still more helpful if you have background in the field. Although this is still a very good book, Harrington’s “Games, Strategies and Decision Making” is much more easy to read and treats the problems in more detail.