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Firefox extension to scrape data from a Wingspan game replay on BGA

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bga-wingspan-scraper

Firefox extension to generate JSON output of the score history of a Wingspan game on Board Game Arena.

This code has been developed and tested using Firefox around v118-119.

Installation

You can either use a release version of the extension, or the latest version of the code in the repo.

Release Version

  1. Download the .zip file from the most recent release.
  2. Open Firefox and navigate to about:debugging.
  3. Select "This Firefox" from the sidebar.
  4. Click Load Temporary Add-on....
  5. Browse to and select the downloaded .zip file.

Latest Version

  1. Follow the project setup and production build instructions from CONTRIBUTING.md.
  2. Open Firefox and navigate to about:debugging.
  3. Select "This Firefox" from the sidebar.
  4. Click Load Temporary Add-on....
  5. Browse to and select build-prod/manifest.json.

Usage

  1. Navigate to a Wingspan game replay.
    • A set of (currently crude) overlay buttons should appear at the bottom left of the browser window.
  2. Click Check Move List and Check Play Sequence to be sure that the move context scraping is working as expected. Both should show popup boxes containing true
  3. Click Scrape Scores. The script will start advancing through the game and scraping the scores. Once complete, it will automatically trigger download of the data files.

Output Data Format

The Scrape Scores functionality should automatically offer for download the scraped score data using the default download method configured in Firefox's settings.

Two files should be downloaded: one plaintext JSON file, and one file containing a base64-encoded string. Both files contain the same data. To read the b64 data in Python, use encoding='latin-1'.

The files are named with the BGA table ID and a timestamp of when the data was scraped:

<table_id>-YYYYMMDD_HHMMSS.<ext>

If you wish, feel free to use this Google Colab notebook to create a plot of the game score results. Paste the contents of the .b64 output file into the definition for fullData and run the entire notebook.

(needs schema of this JSON)