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Strategic Board Games

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  • Strategic Board Games

    Anyone here ever enojoy any of these games:
    Twilight Imperium (awesome MOO type game)
    Age of Renniasance (great Euro trade game)
    Machiavelli (Italian diplomatic game)
    Cosmic Encounters (Quirky SF game)
    Or any other such games?
    "What can you say about a society that says that God is dead and Elvis is alive?" Irv Kupcinet

    "It's easy to stop making mistakes. Just stop having ideas." Unknown

  • #2
    Hmmm... I have the feeling you accidentally posted this in the wrong section

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    • #3
      yeah, thnx.
      "What can you say about a society that says that God is dead and Elvis is alive?" Irv Kupcinet

      "It's easy to stop making mistakes. Just stop having ideas." Unknown

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      • #4
        Welcome.

        One with the discussion...

        ----------------
        Dan; Apolyton CS

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        • #5
          I believe that I have played Cosmic Encounters, but it was only a couple of times, and a very long time ago. Here are some multi-player board games that I have played and enjoyed:

          Kingmaker - War of the Roses in England. Very fun game which moved quickly, and had excellent graphics for the time. (Mid 1970s)

          Samurai - Kingmaker in Japan, a less interesting game which had very mediocre graphics for the time. (Mid 1980s)

          Third Reich - Excellent multiplayer game of WWII. Played a lot of this while in the army and never tired of it.

          Titan - another good game, though it could bog down sometimes into a massive war of attrition. 'Strategic' as well as tactical play kept it tense.

          Diplomacy - A classic strategy game, which always seemed to bog down in midgame, but was fascinating in the early game.

          Blackbeard - A very fun game, but as luck played a fairly large role, one which you could not enjoy if you must win every time. (I learned to do this, but it took awhile)
          He's got the Midas touch.
          But he touched it too much!
          Hey Goldmember, Hey Goldmember!

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          • #6
            SUPREMECY

            a major board game...

            it was THE best until puters came along, and CIV replaced it...

            the3.14rt


            ------------------
            how can you be in two places at once
            when you're not anywhere at all?
            ---------------------------------
            We now return you to our regular programming...
            a thrilling tale from yesteryear...
            which is already in progress!!!

            how can you be in two places at once
            when you're not anywhere at all?
            ---------------------------------
            We now return you to our regular programming...
            a thrilling tale from yesteryear...
            which is already in progress!!!

            Comment


            • #7
              Anyone out there play any games from Strategy and Tactics?

              "Legion" and "Viking" were very good historical simulations of ancient warfare - hex maps, die-cut counters...

              "Sniper" was an excellent sim of individual soldiers, with simultaneous scripted moves, and featuring morale, panic, and a wide variety of weapons and tactics.

              These were (gasp) mid '70s. (Showing my age!)
              Best MMORPG on the net: www.cyberdunk.com?ref=310845

              An eye for an eye leaves the whole world blind. -Gandhi

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              • #8
                I played and enjoyed all those games mentioned by Sikander, with the exception of Blackbeard, which I never played, and Third Reich, which I played by thought some of the rules to be artifically restrictive (e.g. you can't attack such-and-such country until such-and-such a date.)

                I never understood the point of Supremacy. It seemed whoever went first, won.

                I also enjoyed many S&T games. My two favorites were a solitaire Roman Empire game, where you're fighting off hoards of invading barbarians and rebelling Legions, and a solitare WWII convoy game, where you had to get your ships safely across the Atlantic. As I remember it, S&T was a magazine which contained a new game every month. They were eventually bought out by--I believe--GDW and put out of business.

                And if you want to show ages, although I did not buy "Chancellorsville" by Avalon Hill (which I believe was the first stategy board game to use hexes), I did buy the next one: "Gettyburg." I also owned Avalon Hill's "Tactics II," which was the first game to use the now standard "attack factor - movement factor."

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                • #9
                  Somehow I was reminded of the original Civilization/Advanced Civilization boardgames by AH.

                  Simpler, subtler and more funny than the computer game, but it was hard to find enough guys sitting around for 8-10 hours for the boardgame.

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                  • #10
                    Right-- There's only one place to find people smart enough to play strategic board games but dumb enough to waste that much time: college.

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                    • #11
                      Isn't Diplomacy a strategic board game? If you think so, come over to the Stories and Diplomacy forum!
                      The honorary duty of a human being
                      is to love, I am human and nothing
                      human can be alien to me.

                      -Maya Angelou

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                      • #12
                        Oooh how about Axis and Allies, Rail Baron, Risk, and stuff like that?
                        ~I like eggs.~

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                        • #13
                          Ooh, yeah, Kingmaker! A definite favorite. I liked the AH Panzer games too. I played Squad Leader once… have never since found anyone willing to spend a month learning the rules. Not even when I was in college.

                          S&T: I liked the Panzer '44 / Mechwar '77 series, and I've made comments before about Globar War, a wonderfully elegant game.

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