In tournaments
Tournament entrants commit their entire bracket upfront, anchored by a single sealed cryptographic commitment, before the first game is played. After the tournament starts, no entrant — across any number of wallets — can change their picks based on new information. Combined with path-dependent scoring, this breaks the wallet-spam economy:- Spinning up 50 wallets costs 50 entry fees. Sybils pay for their own attack.
- Each of those 50 wallets must commit a complete bracket before round one. You cannot wait to see how round one plays out and then “decide” your round-two picks across 50 wallets — your picks across all wallets are locked the moment the tournament starts.
- Random “spread” brackets score badly. Path-dependent scoring means your later picks only count if your earlier picks were also right. A scattershot strategy across many wallets produces many wallets with mostly-broken brackets, not many wallets with high scores.
