It is University policy that the students own the software they write in courses. To enhance the learning experience of future students, I would like to reuse some or all of your code in future courses. Do I have permission to post the source of your player and documentation on the web? yes/no Please can each team send me one response. Here are the results of our gaming adventure and battle of the minds. I am pleased that 6 players could play long games accumulating megabytes of game history. Congratulations to the Rukmal-Hardik-Radhika team for winning the competitions. In almost all games they outperformed the others. But only with the final player they turned in. The previous player was sometimes defeated by Charushila, Animesh and Amrita. To my surprise, the winning team does not use the Relation class nor the outsourced software for computing a good assignment using randomness. The winning team sees two factors as most important to their success: (1) The people issues: they were a smoothly functioning team. (2) The use of a source control system so that they could work in parallel. Congratulations to the tied second/third place winners: Charushila-Animesh-Amrita and Bhavna-Tracy-Vamshi Fourth place: Milena-Jason-Nachiket Fifth place: Juan-Graham-Kyle with their player that used a good risk management strategy of not wanting to be a clever player but a correct one. Sixth place: Lohitaksha-Ketaki-Sonali I would like to thank Bhavna and her team for running additional competitions beyond what Feng did to back up the ranking given above. Thank you for participating in this experiential learning approach to software development. Along the way you also learned about constraint satisfaction problems and the underlying basic knowledge of combinations and permutations and maximizing and minimizing functions.