Posted

David Cui, Chirag Falor, Anand Natarajan, Tina Zhang (Jul 24 2025).
Abstract: We continue the line of work initiated by Kalai et al. (STOC '23), studying "compiled" nonlocal games played between a classical verifier and a single quantum prover, with cryptography simulating the spatial separation between the players. The central open question in this area is to understand the soundness of this compiler against quantum strategies, and apart from results for specific games, all that is known is the recent "qualitative" result of Kulpe et al. (STOC '25) showing that the success probability of a quantum prover in the compiled game is bounded by the game's quantum commuting-operator value in the limit as the cryptographic security parameter goes to infinity. In this work, we make progress towards a quantitative understanding of quantum soundness for general games, by giving a concrete framework to bound the quantum value of compiled nonlocal games. Building on the result of Kulpe et al. together with the notion of "nice" sum-of-squares certificates, introduced by Natarajan and Zhang (FOCS '23) to bound the value of the compiled CHSH game, we extend the niceness framework and construct a hierarchy of semidefinite programs that searches exclusively over nice certificates. We show that this hierarchy converges to the optimal quantum value of the game. Additionally, we present a transformation to make any degree-1 sum-of-squares certificate nice. This approach provides a systematic method to reproduce all known bounds for special classes of games together with Kulpe et al.'s bound for general games from the same framework.

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