“…For two-player games, this can be formalized in axioms such as standardness (assigning each player its stand-alone worth and allocating the surplus equally over all players), egalitarian standardness (ignoring individual entitlements and allocating the full worth equally over the players), and proportional standardness (allocating the full surplus proportional to the stand-alone worths of the players). For example, the Shapley value (Shapley, 1953) and the equal surplus division value (Driessen and Funaki, 1991) satisfy standardness, the equal division value (axiomatized in van den Brink (2007)) satisfies egalitarian standardness, and various proportional values, such as the proportional Email addresses: z.zou@vu.nl (Zhengxing Zou), j.r.vanden.brink@vu.nl (René van den Brink), funaki@waseda.jp (Yukihiko Funaki) value (Ortmann, 2000), the proportional Shapley value (Béal et al, 2018;Besner, 2019), and the proper Shapley value (Vorob'ev and Liapunov, 1998;van den Brink et al, 2015) satisfy proportional standardness. The values can be extended to games with more than two players by, for example reduced game consistency or balanced contributions type of axioms that relate payoffs of players in a game with their payoffs in a game on a reduced player set.…”