Why not? Supposing roystngr to be correct, it's useful information for any reader that if they want to find game-theoretic discussions of related ideas they might want to look for "Chicken" rather than for "Prisoner's Dilemma". Supposing him to be incorrect, other readers might be as well able to correct him as Gram_Stone. Supposing him to be correct, other readers may be able to confirm that, which might be helpful to Gram_Stone.
It's not, as you observe, actually chicken, although it's more closely related to chicken than to the prisoner's dilemma. What it is even more similar to, with the addition of the perfect predictive agent, is the Ultimatum Game, which by the "counterintuitive" property you describe later, God would -also- always lose. (Which I don't know about, one of the properties God is usually described to have is a willingness to punish defectors.)
Which isn't to contribute to the terminology debate, but to point out that the discussion isn't actually furthered by endless debates over how to classify edge cases.
(Which I don't know about, one of the properties God is usually described to have is a willingness to punish defectors.)
If God values punishing defectors enough, then that changes the effective payoffs in the game.
If God's predictive abilities matter, then I take it you're envisaging God in the role of proposer rather than responder, and the sense in which he loses is that e.g. the responder can commit to declining any offer less than (say) $9 from an initial stake of $10, so that God only gets $1. Well. The responder can do that against anyone, perfect...
I don't know enough math and I don't know if this is important, but in the hopes that it helps someone figure something out that they otherwise might not, I'm posting it.
In Soares & Fallenstein (2015), the authors describe the following problem:
More precisely: two agents A and B must choose integers m and n with 0 ≤ m, n ≤ 10, and if m + n ≤ 10, then A receives a payoff of m dollars and B receives a payoff of n dollars, and if m + n > 10, then each agent receives a payoff of zero dollars. B has perfect predictive accuracy and A knows that B has perfect predictive accuracy.
Consider a variant of the aforementioned decision problem in which the same two agents A and B must choose integers m and n with 0 ≤ m, n ≤ 3; if m + n ≤ 3, then {A, B} receives a payoff of {m, n} dollars; if m + n > 3, then {A, B} receives a payoff of zero dollars. This variant is similar to a variant of the Prisoner's Dilemma with a slightly modified payoff matrix:
Likewise, A reasons as follows:
And B:
I figure it's good to have multiple takes on a problem if possible, and that this particular take might be especially valuable, what with all of the attention that seems to get put on the Prisoner's Dilemma and its variants.