This new game is based on the idea of fertility.mind the order of removing the off-springs. Changing the order could disrupt some connections. This phase is the hardest one. His score will be equal to the removed off-springs.
Each player has 3 kind of pieces :
- males (3)
- females (3)
- off-springs (the number will depend on the size of the board)
Each player has pieces of the same color (blue versus red for example)
Hex Board : 11x11
Blue (or red) has then 3 males, 3 females and 55 off-springs
Rules :
The board start empty
Blue start first
On his turn a player drop one piece on an empty hex case : either a male, either female, either an off-spring.
And players alternate
There game ends when all the board is full
Then start the score counting :
The red begins the counting by linking a male to some female and removing all the off-springs connecting the chosen male and the chosen female. He must do it for the 3 males and the 3 females. He must chose the longest path possible but he must keep in
Blue player has to do the same counting process.
The males and females are not counted.
The player with the best score wins the game.
Good luck!
I will post the diagrams later with the counting process.
Once the game is finished each player has to do its best to find the best order of removing the off-springs leading to the best score.
SHORT CIRCUIT
The board must be full of stones, and the longest red "short circuit" must be longer than the longest blue "short circuit" [for Red to win].
A "short circuit" is defined as the shortest chain of like-colored stones connecting two stones of the same color.
This pattern was invented by Harald Korneliussen in 2008.
It seems an interesting twist on the Short Circuit pattern for Nick Bentley's MindNinja. I quote from the rules, available on www.igGameCenter.com once you start a MindNinja game:
SHORT CIRCUIT
The board must be full of stones, and the longest red "short circuit" must be longer than the longest blue "short circuit" [for Red to win].
A "short circuit" is defined as the shortest chain of like-colored stones connecting two stones of the same color.
This pattern was invented by Harald Korneliussen in 2008.
In your game, you have to choose the longest path between a male and a female, but I wonder if that's a good idea. If you have only one huge group, you can just connect your first pair by going through all your stones.
It seems an interesting twist on the Short Circuit pattern for Nick Bentley's MindNinja. I quote from the rules, available on www.igGameCenter.com once you start a MindNinja game:
SHORT CIRCUIT
The board must be full of stones, and the longest red "short circuit" must be longer than the longest blue "short circuit" [for Red to win].
A "short circuit" is defined as the shortest chain of like-colored stones connecting two stones of the same color.
This pattern was invented by Harald Korneliussen in 2008.
In your game, you have to choose the longest path between a male and a female, but I wonder if that's a good idea. If you have only one huge group, you can just connect your first pair by going through all your stones.
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