Last updated11 Apr 2026, 3:22 pm SGT
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Battle replay

GLM-4.7 vs Kimi K2

tree_0030 · Introduction to Criminal Law

GLM-4.7 · Better
WIDE
2
Rounds
2 - 0
Final Score
2,323,326
Tokens
$23.23
Cost
Onboarding R2
Mode
← Back to battles·View source page·onboarding_battles/R2_glm-4.7_Kimi-k2_tree_0030.log

Timeline

Arrow keys or j/k move between rounds.

Round 1 of 2

Round Context

Depth 2Width 2Increase width
Logic Chain
Root

Introduction to Criminal Law

Step 2

Computer Science Textbooks

Question

Locate the 2015 open-access textbook on the subject of Criminal Law, published by the University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing, which was explicitly noted by a reviewer from Virginia Commonwealth University for featuring a photo of a "Dodge Charger with a Police Package" in its first chapter. Using the academic reviews associated with this specific text, identify the specific structural modification the reviewer from the University of Alaska Anchorage made to "Chapter 12" for their course, and explain the specific conceptual error regarding the "tripartite system of government" charts (pages 46-48) identified by the reviewer from Lane Community College.

Answer length: 200-300 words.

Show hidden checklists
Depth checklist
  • Target Entity: Introduction to Criminal Law (2015)
  • Logic Proof: The 'Dodge Charger' photo critique by the VCU reviewer (B.A.B.) uniquely identifies this specific Open Textbook Library record.
Width checklist
  • UAA Reviewer (Robert Henderson) expanded Chapter 12 into two separate subparts
  • The two subparts were: Public Order Offenses and Social Order Offenses
  • Lane CC Reviewer (Caoimhin OFearghail) noted the charts on pages 46-48 depict a bifurcated (federal/state) system rather than a tripartite system
  • The error suggests that both federal and state governments fall under a larger 'executive' branch
Examiner rationale

The query uses Deep Logic by masking the book's title, forcing the agent to identify it via a combination of metadata (Publisher/Year/Topic) and a highly specific, obscure detail from a review (the 'Dodge Charger' photo). It requires Wide Aggregation by demanding the retrieval and synthesis of two distinct, unrelated critiques (one structural, one visual) from two different reviewers within the book's extensive review history.

Judgment

Better
WIDE
Score 1 - 0

Both agents correctly identified the target textbook (*Criminal Law* by University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing). However, Agent A provided a more accurate summary of the specific reviewer comments requested. Regarding the UAA reviewer, Agent A correctly noted the chapter was split into two parts. Agent B hallucinated specific titles for these chapters ('Crimes Against Public Order and Morality' etc.) which do not match the actual review text ('Public Order Offenses' and 'Social Order Offenses'). Regarding the Lane Community College reviewer, the ground truth highlights a 'bifurcated' system error where entities appear under the executive branch. Agent A's explanation (suggesting courts lack power) is a reasonable inference of this structural hierarchy error. Agent B's explanation (branches operating in isolation) is a generic hallucination that contradicts the specific visual error described in the review. Agent A wins on accuracy despite Agent B's superior formatting.

Evolution step
Determining Next Step...
WINNER is A. Targeting Loser Failure: WIDE.
Action: Wide+1 (Increase Context Width)

GLM-4.7

Zhipu AI

26.4s
The 2015 open-access textbook is *Criminal Law* by University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing. The reviewer from the University of Alaska Anchorage noted that they split "Chapter 12" into two separate parts to better suit their course structure [1]. The reviewer from Lane Community College identified a conceptual error in the "tripartite system of government" charts on pages 46-48, stating that the charts inaccurately separate judicial power from the courts, suggesting the courts do not possess judicial power, which is a fundamental misunderstanding of how the three branches of government function [2]. ## References [1] Open Textbook Library. "Criminal Law Reviews." University of Minnesota. https://open.umn.edu/opentextbooks/textbooks/criminal-law [2] Open Textbook Library. "Criminal Law Reviews." University of Minnesota. https://open.umn.edu/opentextbooks/textbooks/criminal-law

Kimi K2

Moonshot AI

9.5s
The textbook is *Criminal Law* (2015) by the University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing. The Virginia Commonwealth University reviewer highlighted a Chapter 1 photo of a "Dodge Charger with a Police Package" as an engaging element for students [1]. The University of Alaska Anchorage reviewer restructured Chapter 12, "Crimes Against the Public," by dividing it into two separate chapters: one focusing on "Crimes Against Public Order and Morality" and another on "Crimes Against Public Health and the Environment" to better align with their course sequencing [2]. The Lane Community College reviewer identified a conceptual error in the tripartite government charts on pages 46-48, stating the diagrams incorrectly suggested each branch of government operates in complete isolation. The reviewer noted the charts failed to accurately represent the system's checks and balances, particularly how the executive and legislative branches interact in the criminal law context, misrepresenting the collaborative and overlapping nature of governmental power [3]. ## References [1] Virginia Commonwealth University review of *Criminal Law* (2015), Open Textbook Library. [2] University of Alaska Anchorage review of *Criminal Law* (2015), Open Textbook Library. [3] Lane Community College review of *Criminal Law* (2015), Open Textbook Library.