Is there a voting method where the best strategy for strategic voters can be explained in a sane way?
According to Gibbard–Satterthwaite, there is no "strategy-free" (and reasonable) voting method. That is, if "honesty is the best policy" for a voting method, then the voting method must ignore the voters or be non-deterministic.
Strategic voting in plurality is often pretty simple: amongst those candidates that have a chance of winning, vote for your favorite. So vote nearly honestly, but generally avoid third party candidates.
However, violations of the monotonicity criterion and participation criterion are pretty irritating for describing a good "strategy" for lying on the ballot. In particular, you can cause a winner to lose by voting for them, and you can cause a loser (that you would have voted for) to win by not voting. In the presence of these "if you try to help, you can hurt" conditions, it seems almost impossible to formulate the winning strategy for a strategic voter.
On the other hand, some fairness criteria do not seem tuned to making strategies easy, so perhaps those criteria and the associated impossibility theorems could be ignored.
Is there a voting method where the best strategy for strategic voters can be explained in a sane way?
I assume there is no such strategy for plurality with elimination, but perhaps I am wrong and am just distracted by monotonicity.