Robust Multidimensional Mean-Payoff Games are Undecidable
Abstract
Mean-payoff games play a central role in quantitative synthesis and verification. In a single-dimensional game a weight is assigned to every transition and the objective of the protagonist is to assure a non-negative limit-average weight. In the multidimensional setting, a weight vector is assigned to every transition and the objective of the protagonist is to satisfy a boolean condition over the limit-average weight of each dimension, e.g., (x1) ≤ 0 (x2)≥ 0 (x3) ≥ 0. We recently proved that when one of the players is restricted to finite-memory strategies then the decidability of determining the winner is inter-reducible with Hilbert's Tenth problem over rationals (a fundamental long-standing open problem). In this work we allow arbitrary (infinite-memory) strategies for both players and we show that the problem is undecidable.
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