SimonFa, on 2013-September-07, 03:36, said:
More importantly would it have worked against a human?
I am glad you asked about humans. We can use logic when we talk about what humans do. Not so much with the bots.
If West were a human, we would be thinking "clearly a novice". The rush to cash aces is very much a novice strategy.
When East won the
♦K, the human thinking would be something like "Clearly my partner has shifted to his doubleton diamond, now why his declarer dropping the Q". He would likely still return a diamond since this sequence of plays is absolutely inconsistent with a singleton club and four diamonds. But, your falsecard might shake him out of that line of thought since the Q play is so inconsistent with what he thinks is going on. Of course, it is tough for you to visualize the actual West hand on this defense for the same reason - this series of plays is just plain inconsistent with the cards he holds. If did know the actual holding, you would NOT drop the Queen and now East would have no reason to shift.
There is a name for a series of plays that are so bad that they will convince an opponent that something else is happening and cause him to go wrong. That is called a "Grosvenor". In a way that is what has happened here. West has committed a Grosvenor by shifting to diamonds instead of the obvious club shift. But East is so confused by the illogical shift that he thinks your play of the Q is the actual Grosvenor (never mind that you would have a hand inconsistent with your bids).
Back to actual bots. This sort of falsecarding does seem to short circuit their little bot brains fairly often. Sometimes they work against humans, but humans are more likely to catch the inconsistencies and figure the truth out.