Nash Equilibrium: Good and Bad Outcomes

Towards the end of 2024, I left the 9 to 5 routine given my financial goals were achieved. It felt great not needing to hug my phone to sleep and waking up at whatever godly (or ungodly) hour desired. Fast forward six months, the retirement routine became mundane. I needed to find meaningful use of my newly found time. Between street and league soccer, writing a book, exotic getaways, relocation back to my adopted home country, all the while taking on advisory gigs with interesting companies, life seemed like a handful. Somehow, I managed to find time to study various topics of interest. One topic that really caught on was game theory. Learning game theory was a self-improvement initiative. I wanted a life broader horizon and be better equipped when when dealing with others. My definition of game theory is the study of interactive decision making of more than one party, where the outcome of each particpant or player depends on ...