Global Thermonuclear War

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A pen-and-paper game designed to be played with no additional resources.
 
A pen-and-paper game designed to be played with no additional resources.
   
Line 6: Line 7:
   
 
== Rules ==
 
== Rules ==
  +
There is a variant described in the rules below - players should agree on which variant is being used before beginning.
   
* At the start of each turn, each player can build one attack (bomb+missile) OR one defence per city, with the capital capable of building one additional of either. They then allocate defences to specific cities, whilst attacks are part of an unspecified pool (missile silos aren't cities)
+
Each turn is split into three stages.
* In the middle of each turn, each player announces where their missiles are attacking (specifing how many missiled to which city for which enemy they are attacking). There is no requirement that all missiles be launched (they can be hoarded)
 
* At the end of each turn, all missiles conceptually launch simultaneously, with each missile destroying a single defence - or if there are no defences on the target city, destroying the city. Each player need only announce which cities survived or were destroyed, but need not provide any additional information (as that would reveal their own defensive strategies)
 
   
Conceptually each turn occurs simultaneously, but in practice will be done sequentially around players, and the middle and end steps of each turn can be combined.
+
1. Build-and-allocate.
  +
* At the start of each turn, each player builds one nuke OR one defence per city, with the capital capable of building one additional of either. They then allocate defences to specific cities
  +
** Game variant 1: nukes are allocated per-city, meaning they can only be launched whilst the city survives.
  +
** Game variant 2: nukes are not per-city (missile silos aren't cities), meaning no chance of hoarded missiles being lost with the loss of a city.
  +
* Players then assign targets for their nukes. (eg: 2 nukes to player four's city five. 1 nuke to player two's city seven, etc). There is no requirement that all nukes be used that turn. They can be hoarded.
  +
  +
2. Attack!
  +
* Conceptually, all attacks are simultaneous, but for practical reasons are announced in turn around the table.
  +
* Each nuke destroys one defence, or the city if it has no remaining defences.
  +
* Recipients of nukes note the resulting damage to themselves.
  +
  +
3. Survey the damage
  +
* At the end of each turn, each player announces in turn if any cities have been destroyed. No further information need be revealed (as that would reveal information about their defensive strategies)
  +
  +
Remember: Conceptually each attack occurs simultaneously, but in practice is done sequentially around the players. Retaliation must await the next turn!
   
 
== Credits ==
 
== Credits ==
 
* Originally created by Pauline, Evan and others to pass the time whilst waiting in the queue for Episode I.
 
* Originally created by Pauline, Evan and others to pass the time whilst waiting in the queue for Episode I.
  +
* An online version was created and may yet be resurrected.
  +
  +
== 2020 Revisions ==
  +
* Centers of industry and diplomacy
  +
Instead of a capital which can build "one extra thing", proposed idea is that there be a city designated the capital which acts as a "center of diplomacy" and it's +1 build is a defence, whilst there is a seperate "center of industry" which builds an additional missile. If either city is destroyed, then that +1 ability is lost. HOWEVER, the player then designates a different city to be their replacement capital/industry, and that city gains the +1 ability on it's third turn. (if the city is destroyed, then a new city can be designated and the turn count resets). A city cannot be both centers unless it is the final city
  +
  +
This has not yet been play tested and has been brainstormed solely from the logic of "in the real world, if you lose your capital, you don't go without - you specify a replacement!"
  +
  +
* Resource limitations
  +
It's unknown how many people played the game when first developed, however a 2020 game with seven people found the end-game became tedious (with about half the cities gone). In discussion, it was proposed that as there are more players, the number of cities per player reduces. Thus it is proposed that initially there be a maximum of 42 cities - split evenly amongst players and capped at 10. Thus two, three and four player games would have 10 cities each. Five player game has 8 per player. Six player game has 7 cities each, Seven player: 6. Eight player: 5, Nine and Ten player games have 4 each...
  +
  +
This has not been playtested.
   
   

Revision as of 11:56, 23 December 2020

Contents

A pen-and-paper game designed to be played with no additional resources.

Concept

Each player represents a nation involved in nuclear warfare with all other players. Each player has 10 cities, with one designated as a capital, and is eliminated when all their cities are eliminated. Winner is the last surviving player.

Rules

There is a variant described in the rules below - players should agree on which variant is being used before beginning.

Each turn is split into three stages.

1. Build-and-allocate.

  • At the start of each turn, each player builds one nuke OR one defence per city, with the capital capable of building one additional of either. They then allocate defences to specific cities
    • Game variant 1: nukes are allocated per-city, meaning they can only be launched whilst the city survives.
    • Game variant 2: nukes are not per-city (missile silos aren't cities), meaning no chance of hoarded missiles being lost with the loss of a city.
  • Players then assign targets for their nukes. (eg: 2 nukes to player four's city five. 1 nuke to player two's city seven, etc). There is no requirement that all nukes be used that turn. They can be hoarded.

2. Attack!

  • Conceptually, all attacks are simultaneous, but for practical reasons are announced in turn around the table.
  • Each nuke destroys one defence, or the city if it has no remaining defences.
  • Recipients of nukes note the resulting damage to themselves.

3. Survey the damage

  • At the end of each turn, each player announces in turn if any cities have been destroyed. No further information need be revealed (as that would reveal information about their defensive strategies)

Remember: Conceptually each attack occurs simultaneously, but in practice is done sequentially around the players. Retaliation must await the next turn!

Credits

  • Originally created by Pauline, Evan and others to pass the time whilst waiting in the queue for Episode I.
  • An online version was created and may yet be resurrected.

2020 Revisions

  • Centers of industry and diplomacy

Instead of a capital which can build "one extra thing", proposed idea is that there be a city designated the capital which acts as a "center of diplomacy" and it's +1 build is a defence, whilst there is a seperate "center of industry" which builds an additional missile. If either city is destroyed, then that +1 ability is lost. HOWEVER, the player then designates a different city to be their replacement capital/industry, and that city gains the +1 ability on it's third turn. (if the city is destroyed, then a new city can be designated and the turn count resets). A city cannot be both centers unless it is the final city

This has not yet been play tested and has been brainstormed solely from the logic of "in the real world, if you lose your capital, you don't go without - you specify a replacement!"

  • Resource limitations

It's unknown how many people played the game when first developed, however a 2020 game with seven people found the end-game became tedious (with about half the cities gone). In discussion, it was proposed that as there are more players, the number of cities per player reduces. Thus it is proposed that initially there be a maximum of 42 cities - split evenly amongst players and capped at 10. Thus two, three and four player games would have 10 cities each. Five player game has 8 per player. Six player game has 7 cities each, Seven player: 6. Eight player: 5, Nine and Ten player games have 4 each...

This has not been playtested.

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