How to play Domination - Focus - 1001 juegos de mesa Antiguos y Nuevos del mundo

Focus, Domination, Dominion, Logical and Tactical Focus, Focus Created by: Sid Sackson in 1963 Published by: Daekor Designs, Estrella, Hugendubel Publishing, COSMOS, Labo Market, Milton Bradley, Mondadori Games, Nilco SA, Parker Brothers, Random House, Inc., Spear's Games, Whitman, WOSI "Wspólna Sprawa" Setup: Each player chooses the color they will play and takes the corresponding number of counters. The number of counters and colors used depends on the number of players: • Two players: Green and red counters: 18 of each color • Three players: Green, red, and blue counters: 13 of each color • Four players: Green, red, blue, and yellow counters: 13 of each color Playing the Game: On their turn, each player makes a move. This can be a single move, multiple moves, or a reserve move. Simple Move: In a simple move, a player moves one of their pieces to an adjacent space. This piece can move one space vertically or horizontally. It can never move diagonally. The piece can move to an empty space or to a space with one or more pieces. If a piece moves to a space with a stack of pieces, the piece that was just moved is placed on top of the stack. A player can move their piece to a stack containing their own pieces, other players' pieces, or both. Multiple Move: The other move a player can make is a multiple move. In a multiple move, a player can move an entire stack of pawns. A player can only move a stack if their pawn is on top. When a player wants to move a stack, they choose which part they want to move. They can move the entire stack or remove some pieces from the top and leave some of the playing pieces behind. Reserving and Capturing Pieces: After moving your piece/stack, you must check the height of the stack to which you have moved it(them). If the new stack contains more than five pieces, some will be removed. Starting with the bottommost piece, you will remove pieces until only five remain. Pieces removed from the board will be captured or kept in reserve. All pieces not belonging to the player who made the move will be captured. These pieces will be removed and will not be used for the remainder of the game. The pieces of the player who made the move will be added to their reserve pile. Reserve Move: If a player has reserve pieces, they may make a reserve move instead of one or more. To make a reserve move, take one of their reserve pieces and place it on any space on the board. The reserve piece can be placed on an empty space, on a space with only one piece, or on a space with several pieces. Placing the reserve piece counts as their turn, as they cannot move the piece they just added to the board. End of the Game: The game ends when only one player can move pieces. This means that one player has their colored pieces on top of all stacks and none of the other players have any spare pieces. The last player able to move wins the game. Players can also opt for alternative victory conditions for shorter games. These alternative victory conditions depend on the number of players. • Two players: The first player to capture six of the other player's pieces wins the game. • Three players: The first player to capture ten pieces of any color (including their own) wins the game. • Four players: The first player to capture two pieces of each of the opponent's colors or ten pieces in total (including their own) wins the game.