Here, competition centers on speed, timing, and exploitation of momentary informational lead. Advantage is created not by deception, but by converting earlier awareness into irreversible action. Failure arises when an agent consistently reacts to stale information, discovering too late that the contest was unequal in practice despite formal symmetry.


Categories of Initiative Race

Strictly Competitive × Perfect Information × Asymmetric Access (Timing / Visibility)

Fixed structure (held constant):

This regime is competition through initiative, not rule-breaking.


1. Opportunistic Race

(Non-binding commitment)

What it is
Both agents compete to act first, but remain free to disengage or re-time their actions.

How it works

Why this is stable
The domain rewards patience and timing; commitment is optional.

Working scenarios

Canonical intuition

“Move first if it pays — wait if it doesn’t.”


2. First-Move Commitment

(Unilateral binding)

What it is
One agent commits to acting immediately upon detecting an opportunity, while the other retains flexibility.

How it works

Why this is stable
The task rewards decisiveness; hesitation is more costly than error.

Working scenarios

Canonical intuition

“If I see it, I go.”


3. Mutual Precommitment Race

(Bilateral binding)

What it is
Both agents commit in advance to act immediately upon observing a trigger condition.

How it works

Why this is stable
Precommitment removes hesitation and converts initiative into pure reaction speed.

Working scenarios

Canonical intuition

“Whoever reacts faster wins — no waiting.”


4. Enforced Initiative Protocol

(Externally enforced binding)

What it is
Initiative is governed by externally imposed timing or execution rules.

How it works

Why this is stable
The contest remains competitive while eliminating timing manipulation.

Working scenarios

Canonical intuition

“You must act now — the system decides when.”


Structural takeaway (Initiative Race)

In Initiative Race, commitment governs how optional speed is.

Commitment expressionWhat it fixes
Opportunistic RaceOptional action
First-Move CommitmentOne-sided decisiveness
Mutual Precommitment RacePure reaction contest
Enforced Initiative ProtocolSystem-imposed timing