Stacktrices
Under development
This game is currently under development, in the Playtesting stage. Feedback is strongly encouraged! Feel free to give comments on game design or structure on the talk page.
Stacktrices | ||
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Gregory Lattanzio | ||
A game of fighting enacted within a digital matrix | ||
Players: | 2 | |
Length: | Medium | |
Complexity: | Medium | |
Trios per color: | 4 | |
Number of colors: | 5 | |
- - - - - - Other equipment - - - - - - | ||
7x7 board (a chessboard minus two rows) and a stash pad or space for the trading post | ||
Setup time: | 3 minutes | |
Playing time: | 20 minutes - 40 minutes | |
Strategy depth: | High | |
Random chance: | Low | |
Theme: | Combat | |
Status: Complete (v1.0), Year released: 2011 | ||
Description:[edit | edit source]
For a highly evolved but impassioned warrior species on Mars, war is a part of every day life. However, this fighting is enacted in the civilized space of a digital matrix. Children and adults alike are “plugged in” as “stacks”, competing in an arena, using whatever limited resources they can afford (specially designed pyramids that work as software patches). Luckily for them, all battles are virtual, and, at the end of the day, it’s only fame or shame that they earn. This is a simulation of their simulation, designed for earthbound players.
This is a strategy game where you try to eliminate the opposing player's stacks. The movement abilities of a given stack are determined by the programing patches that are on them. Players move, attack, and trade pieces (to develop pupils, adults, and skilled stacks) to further their goal, but they also each have a software hacker or "thief" who can steal from the other player's stacks.
Requirments:[edit | edit source]
i. 7X7 board.
ii. At minimum, an 8house combination of Xeno and Rainbow (four of each). This includes:
- A white stash (three queens and four drones)
- A black stash (three queens and four drones)
- A clear stash (four pawns, four drones, and three queens), these are skill pieces.
- One stash of another color (four pawns, four drones, three queens), the movement pieces.
- Two pawns of some other color. These are called the vulnerability pawns.
iii. A stash pad/space, the “Digital Trading Post.”
Setup:[edit | edit source]
i. The drones and queens are arranged on each player’s side of the table per this illustration (fig. 1).
ii. Unseen by the other player, each player places a vulnerability (pawn) under one of their drones.
iii. Each player gets one clear and one colored queen, two clear and two colored drones, and two clear and two colored queens.
iv. The players then cap their opaque pieces as they wish—using all of the pieces but without stranding any clear pieces (see below). Some opaque pieces may remain uncapped for now.
v. The two remaining queens go onto the store.
Stacked pieces:[edit | edit source]
i. The number of spaces a given stack can moved is altered by the colored piece that is placed over their opaque base. Each stack is limited to a single movement piece at any time.
a. Movement abilities are as follows.
- Pawn=One space
- Drone=Two spaces
- Queen=Three spaces
Stacks with movement pieces, but without any skill pieces, are called adult stacks, and may only move forward diagonally (the number of spaces determined by their size per above).
b. Pupils (stacks without any movement or skill pieces) may only be moved to attack a stack in any adjacent square.
ii. When there is at least one clear piece on top of a stack, the stack is called a skilled stack. Such stacks have added movement abilities. Clear pieces can only be placed on stacks that have a color movement piece.
a. Skill abilities are as follows.
- Pawn: Stack may move in any diagonal direction
- Drone: Stack may move orthogonally (in any direction)
- Queen: Stack may move diagonally or orthogonally and may (unlike the other stacks) move through a friendly stack.
The following rules apply to moving a queen skilled stack.
Moving through the friendly stack does not count as a space when counting.
Adult stacks pass on the moving stack in the direction it is headed in.
A friendly skilled stack may redirect the moving stack if the player chooses, to the left or right one square relative to the direction that the stack is moving from (i.e., if the stack is moved diagonally, the stack may be redirected to the orthogonal directions on either side). Otherwise, the moving stack can pass through as with an adult stack.
Pupils cannot assist in transporting a stack with a queen movement piece. They end up blocking the skilled stack.
b. A clear pawn may be placed on a clear drone to offer a stack both orthogonal and diagonal capabilities.
Movement/Attack Phase:[edit | edit source]
i. Any one stack may move per its limits and capabilities. It may eliminate one opposing stack within its reach.
ii. Stacks are not allowed to pass through or beyond other stacks, except as detailed under the rules for queen skill pieces.
iii. Attacked stacks are removed from play, with all non-base pieces given to the store, except for those pieces that are stolen.
iv. Passing is not allowed.
Trading Phase:[edit | edit source]
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i. After the moving phase, the active player may make an upgrade. Only one upgrade is allowed per round. This may involve trading up to three non-opaque pieces for up to three pieces (examples shown in fig. 2). The trading post assesses a fee of one pip point per trade. Thus the value of what you receive back will be one pip point less. Both skilled and movement pieces may be involved in a trade. The new piece or pieces must be placed either on stacks that were in on the trade or on any pupil. Pieces not in on a trade remain with their stacks.
ii. After the trade, the pieces traded in are added to the store.
Vulnerabilities (the thief):[edit | edit source]
- The drone with a hidden pawn is called the thief.
- It is permissible within the matrix to punish thieves when they are captured and removed from the game (they were probably using pirated software anyway). An attacking player will steal one of its powers.
- Whenever a drone is attacked, the opposing player must reveal whether it is the thief. After losing one of its pieces to the other player or to the store, the thief stack is removed from the board. The attacked player then hides the vulnerability under one of her or his remaining drones, which becomes the new thief stack.
- Usually stacks can be slid during the movement phase. However, this isn’t always the case. Put one finger under your drone stacks when picking them up, to maintain the mystery of whether it has the vulnerability or not.
Home Row:[edit | edit source]
i. If, at any point, your thief lands on the opposing player's home row (the row that the drones started in), you may take an unprotected piece from the opposing player or any piece available from the store. This piece may be given to any of your stacks. Clear pieces may be stacked. If there are no legal options for a movement piece to be added to a stack (including pupils), a single piece may be upgraded by one pip count. The old piece is put in the store and the new one is put in its place.
You may return the vulnerability to the same stack it was already under. However, if you do so, that stack must end one turn in its own home row before it can return to the opposing home row to capture further pieces. This would always be the case when there is only one drone stack remaining for a player.
ii. Any stack that reaches the opposing home row may warp over from their position in the opposing player’s home row to any unoccupied space of their own home row on a following turn. This constitutes the player’s move for that round.
Protected/Unprotected Pieces:[edit | edit source]
i. The movement piece from a skilled stack cannot be removed, as it would strand the skill piece on a stack. If a skilled stack has both the skilled drone and pawn, either may be taken.
Victory:[edit | edit source]
Eliminate all of the opposing matrix stacks from the arena.
Example of Queen Play:[edit | edit source]
In this example, the skilled queen with a drone movement piece (d,2) can move into any of the marked squares. It can use the skilled drone stack (d,3) to redirect itself into (c,4), (d,4), or (e,4). It may then use the adult stack (c,4) to attack the piece at (a,6). Notice that it moves through its friendly stacks without expending any of its movement points.
Rule Variants and Notes:[edit | edit source]
Rule Variant 1: The thief may also be able to steal during an attack. However, a player doing so has to make the call. Their vulnerability remains exposed until the stack is captured. Of course, this would give an advantage to a player in the weak position of having a single drone stack, who might as well steal with each attack at that point. This optional rule may have unwanted consequences.
Rule Variant 2: A playtester recommended that, after the initial set up, we allow movement pieces to be stacked as well as skilled pieces. Such stacks could only be accomplished through trades or captures, and the movement points would be accumulative.
Notes:
Unequal or variable powers may be established during the first few rounds if one player quickly trades in for the skilled queen. This move could force the opposing player to counter by obtaining the other queen from the trading stash on her next turn. They may even be able to build a very powerful skilled pawn/drone stack in the process.
One of the key concepts behind this was to make a game that actually used the opaque pieces in a stack. It was important the use of hidden information not seem gimicky or overly chancy; the little chance that is in the game is more about deception and bluffing than anything else. At its heart, it remains a strategy game. When designing the powers and resources within the game, I've tried to keep things simple and intuitive.
PDF Version:[edit | edit source]
The current rules are available as a pdf.