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The University of Tokyo

Welcome to Game Theory

Michihiro Kandori

Instructor: Michihiro Kandori

108,220 already enrolled

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Gain insight into a topic and learn the fundamentals.

2,024 reviews

Beginner level
No prior experience required
Flexible schedule
2 weeks at 10 hours a week
Learn at your own pace
96%
Most learners liked this course
Gain insight into a topic and learn the fundamentals.

2,024 reviews

Beginner level
No prior experience required
Flexible schedule
2 weeks at 10 hours a week
Learn at your own pace
96%
Most learners liked this course

What you'll learn

  • Analyze rationality and social outcomes.

  • Explain why game theory applies to social problems.

  • Understand Nash equilibrium as a solution concept.

  • Relate player intellect to Nash equilibrium.

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Assessments

20 assignments

Taught in English

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There are 4 modules in this course

Can a single framework analyze diverse social and economic problems? This module introduces game theory as a unified way to study strategic situations, where each person’s best action depends on what others do. You will learn how social problems can be formulated as games with players, strategies, and payoffs, why rational decision-making alone is not enough in strategic settings, and how Nash equilibrium provides a basic solution concept. Through examples from traffic, politics, location choice, and a simple card game, this module builds the foundation for understanding strategic interaction.

What's included

12 videos5 readings5 assignments

This module deepens your understanding of Nash equilibrium through a wider range of examples, including the Prisoner’s Dilemma, coordination games, market competition, auctions, and sports. You will examine why people may play Nash equilibrium, when rationality alone is sufficient, and when communication, learning, or repeated adjustment are needed to support equilibrium behavior. The module also introduces mixed strategies, showing why randomization can be optimal in games such as rock-paper-scissors and penalty kicks. By the end of the module, you will see both the power and the limits of Nash equilibrium as a tool for analyzing strategic interaction.

What's included

10 videos1 reading5 assignments

This module examines the relationship between rationality and equilibrium in game theory. You will explore how Nash equilibrium can arise through careful reasoning, trial-and-error learning, and even evolutionary processes. Along the way, you will study payoffs, expected utility, dominated strategies, common knowledge of rationality, and mixed-strategy predictions. The module shows why game theory remains useful even when players differ greatly in sophistication.

What's included

9 videos3 readings5 assignments

This module focuses on cooperation and the tension between individual rationality and social efficiency. You will learn why Nash equilibrium often leads to outcomes that are stable but socially undesirable, and how game theory explains this conflict in settings such as the Prisoner’s Dilemma, market competition, and global warming. The module also introduces major ways to sustain cooperation, including better institutional design, binding contracts, repeated interaction, and reputation. By the end, you will see how game theory helps explain both the failure and the enforcement of cooperation in social and economic life.

What's included

11 videos2 readings5 assignments

Instructor

Instructor ratings
(414 ratings)
Michihiro Kandori
The University of Tokyo
1 Course108,220 learners

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