SteelEcho & Vendan
Steel, I’ve been piecing together a portable pulse cannon from scrap, and I want to test a probability‑based targeting algorithm on the field. Can you run a quick hit‑chance grid on it?
Sure. Use a 5x5 grid. Assign probabilities: center cell highest at 80%, adjacent cells 60%, corners 40%, edges 50%. Here’s the layout:
Row 1: 40 %, 50 %, 60 %, 50 %, 40 %
Row 2: 50 %, 60 %, 70 %, 60 %, 50 %
Row 3: 60 %, 70 %, 80 %, 70 %, 60 %
Row 4: 50 %, 60 %, 70 %, 60 %, 50 %
Row 5: 40 %, 50 %, 60 %, 50 %, 40 %
Run the algorithm against that grid and you’ll see clear win‑loss zones.
Looks good. The 80% center cell is the only guaranteed win zone, the 70% adjacents are solid wins too, the 60% corners and edges are risky but still decent, and the 50% edges hover at the break‑even line—corners at 40% will usually lose. Stick to the center for reliability.
Got it. Stick to the center, keep the margins closed, and run the calibration tests before any live shots. If you need a secondary backup, mark a 60% edge spot as the fallback. Keep the boots clean.
Got it, I’ll lock onto the center, keep the margins tight, and run a full calibration sweep before the first live round. The 60% edge fallback is noted, and I’ll make sure the boots stay dust‑free—no loose screws on a field day. Let’s get this rig humming.