Help us improve
Share bugs, ideas, or general feedback.
From skills-for-humanity
Routes strategic situations to the appropriate game-theory skill for payoff analysis, incentive design, cooperation problems, or bidding strategy.
npx claudepluginhub human-avatar/skills-for-humanityHow this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/skills-for-humanity:s4h-game-theoryThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Your best move depends on what they'll do — and their best move depends on what you'll do. This interdependence is the defining feature of strategic interaction. Game theory provides formal tools for reasoning through it: mapping payoffs, finding stable outcomes, designing incentives, and analysing how cooperation forms and breaks down.
Analyses cooperation problems where individual rationality leads to collective irrationality. Identifies prisoner's dilemma structures and applies Axelrod's Tit for Tat insights.
Applies Nash equilibrium analysis to competitive strategy, pricing, auctions, contracts, or negotiations where multiple rational parties make interdependent decisions — identifies stable strategy combinations and predicts where unstable strategies will drift.
Share bugs, ideas, or general feedback.
Your best move depends on what they'll do — and their best move depends on what you'll do. This interdependence is the defining feature of strategic interaction. Game theory provides formal tools for reasoning through it: mapping payoffs, finding stable outcomes, designing incentives, and analysing how cooperation forms and breaks down.
Step 1: Diagnose the interaction type
Read the situation and identify which of the following patterns applies.
Framing check: Confirm the specific strategic situation before continuing. State what you've identified — the actual interaction, who the players are, and what decision is at stake — in one sentence, then use AskUserQuestion:
Question: "I'm reading this as: [your one-sentence framing of the strategic situation and the players involved]. Is that right?"
Header: "Framing"
Options:
One-shot strategic choice — players make a single decision simultaneously or sequentially, and payoffs depend on the combination of choices. You need to identify the stable outcome (equilibrium) and whether it's efficient.
→ Use /s4h-game-theory-equilibrium
Cooperation vs. defection — each player is individually tempted to defect even though mutual cooperation would be better for everyone. You're facing a race to the bottom, collective action failure, or asking whether to cooperate or hold back.
→ Use /s4h-game-theory-prisoners-dilemma
Credibility problem — you have private information and need others to believe your claim, or you're being told something and aren't sure whether to believe it. Cheap talk, costly signalling, commitment devices.
→ Use /s4h-game-theory-signaling
Rule design — you're not playing the game, you're designing it. You want to create rules, incentives, or mechanisms that make players behave in a desired way — especially to elicit honest information or align self-interest with collective benefit.
→ Use /s4h-game-theory-mechanism-design
Long-run repeated relationship — the same two or more parties will interact repeatedly over time. Reputation, trust, retaliation, and the shadow of the future are all active.
→ Use /s4h-game-theory-iterated
Coalition and fair division — multiple players could form alliances and share gains. Which coalition will form? How should value be divided fairly? Who holds power?
→ Use /s4h-game-theory-coalition
Competitive bidding — a structured auction or procurement process where you're either bidding or designing the process. How much to bid? How to avoid the winner's curse? How to design a revenue-maximising or efficient auction?
→ Use /s4h-game-theory-auction
Step 2: Confirm and route
Present the diagnosis clearly — what kind of interaction this is and which skill fits — then use AskUserQuestion:
/[sub-skill]?"/[sub-skill] — diagnosis is correctIf the situation spans multiple types (e.g., a cooperation problem inside a long-run relationship), note both in the question and ask which dimension is most pressing before routing.
Game theory provides formal payoff structure: it tells you what a rational player will do given the rules, payoffs, and other players. Strategy (see /s4h-strategy) provides contextual wisdom: how to position, when to act, how to use terrain and timing. They are complementary — use game theory to understand the structure of the interaction, and strategy to act effectively within it. When both apply, use game theory first to clarify what the incentives actually are, then strategy to decide how to play.
The category skills are: /s4h-game-theory-equilibrium, /s4h-game-theory-prisoners-dilemma, /s4h-game-theory-signaling, /s4h-game-theory-mechanism-design, /s4h-game-theory-iterated, /s4h-game-theory-coalition, /s4h-game-theory-auction.
Related categories: /s4h-strategy (contextual wisdom for acting within games), /s4h-decision (single-player choice without strategic interaction), /s4h-social (power dynamics and coalition politics).