Given that there is significant existing variation in human intelligence, it's curious that we are not all much smarter than we actually are. Besides the well-known costs of higher intelligence (e.g., more energy use, bigger heads causing more difficult births), it seems that being smart can be a disadvantage when playing some non-zero-sum games. Here is one example. Consider an infinitely repeated game with 2n players, where in each round all players are randomly matched against each other in n seperate prisoner's dillema stage games. After each round is finished, the outcomes are recorded and published. One plausible outcome of this game is for everyone to follow this strategy (let's call it A): Initially mark all players as "good". If anyone defects against a player who is marked as "good", mark him as "bad". Play "cooperate" against "good" players, "defect" against "bad" players. Now suppose in each stage game, there is probability p that the outcome is not made public. Also assume that n is large enough so that we can disregard the possibility that two players might face each other again in the future and remember a previous non-published outcome. Now depending on p, the discount factor, and the actual payoffs, it can still be an equilibrium for everyone to follow strategy A. For example, suppose the payoffs are 2,2/3,-10/-10,3/0,0, and p=0.5. If a player deviates from the above strategy and plays "defect" against a "good" player, he gains 1 utility (compared to strategy A) for the current round, but has a probability of 0.5 of losing 2 utility in each future round. Now further suppose that the random number generator used to decide whether each outcome is published or not is only pseudorandom, and there are some "smart" players who are able to recognize the pattern and predict whether a given stage game's outcome will be published. And suppose it's public knowledge who these "smart" players are. In this third game, its no longer an equilibrium for everyone to follow strategy A, because a "smart" player should always play "defect" in any round in which he predicts the outcome won't be published. The "normal" players can follow strategy A, or they can follow a modified strategy (B) which starts by marking all "smart" players as "bad", in which case the "smart" players should also start by marking all "normal" players as "bad". In either case the total surplus is less than if there were no "smart" players. But with some game parameters, only the latter is an equilibria, in which case "smart" players actually end up worse off than "normal" players. (Note that even when the first outcome is an equlibrium, it is not coalition-proof. I.e., the "normal" players have an incentive to collectively switch to strategy B.) For example, consider the above payoffs again. When a "normal" player faces a "smart" player, he knows there is .5 probability that the "smart" player will defect. If he deviates from strategy A to play "defect", there is .5 probability that he gains 10 utility, and .5 probability that he gains 1 utility in the current round and loses no more than 2 utilities in each future round. Therefore depending on the time discount factor he may have an incentive to play "defect".