The Results
Corrigan Score Explained
The Corrigan Score is the more traditional way of answering The Carb Question, which draws results from a cumulative - if arcane - positional scoring system. Contenders that rank first score more points than those who rank second, and so on.
Historically, The Corrigan score was the only official system until The ISOCRA's controversial "Winton Decree". After years of lobbying and often politically incited violence from pressure groups who argued that the Corrigan score merely rewarded mediocrity, The Weighted Havoc Ratio was introduced in 2018.
In a post-Winton world, fans of The Carb Question are free to pick whichever score suits their own agenda, a quirk that has led inexplicably to both more and less politically-motivated violence than before the Decree.
Potato
Bread
Pasta
Rice
Noodles
Weighted Havoc Ratio Explained
The Weighted Havoc Ratio emerged as part of The ISOCRA's "Winton Decree", and is a revolutionary newly-legitimised form of scoring where Contenders are placed solely based on the number of top ranking votes they received.
After decades of underground use, proponents of this scoring system finally gained enough political power within ISOCRA to lobby for its legitimisation, arguing its purity as Contenders are only scored based on whether or not they finish top.
Corrigan Traditionalists are often diametrically opposed to this populist movement, highlighting the fact that such a blunt measure ignores nuance and is symptomatic of Broken Britain.