Harry wins. At least, I am presuming he is actively trying to weaken the Draco/Lucious alliance and enforce cooperation between Draco and Hermione. Losing a game to achieve that would perhaps be the first example of Harry doing something that wasn’t motivated by his ego.
Now, I don’t recall, is there any tangible motivation for the generals to keep winning these games now that the wish has been decided?
Now, I don’t recall, is there any tangible motivation for the generals to keep winning these games now that the wish has been decided?
They do still win Quirrell points, which translate to House points among other things. (Harry probably doesn’t care about House points, especially with Hermione’s wish, but he does care about impressing Quirrell.)
Harry wins. At least, I am presuming he is actively trying to weaken the Draco/Lucious alliance and enforce cooperation between Draco and Hermione. Losing a game to achieve that would perhaps be the first example of Harry doing something that wasn’t motivated by his ego.
Now, I don’t recall, is there any tangible motivation for the generals to keep winning these games now that the wish has been decided?
They do still win Quirrell points, which translate to House points among other things. (Harry probably doesn’t care about House points, especially with Hermione’s wish, but he does care about impressing Quirrell.)