玩家评分: 7.8

拥有
海中之手
Hands in the Sea

桌游极客排名: 1939

本月排名变化: 20

玩家评分: 7.8

玩家人数: 2 (最佳: 2人)

时长: 90-120 分钟

难度: 3.19 (重度策略)

适合年龄: 14+

专业评分: 6.20

语言依赖:

大量文本需要阅读

出版年份: 2016

出版商:

| Do it games | Knight Works, LLC

设计师:

| Daniel Berger (I)

美工:

| Jamie Noble-Frier | Naomi Robinson

桌游类别:

|古代 |战争

在海上的手是一个双人战斗甲板建造战争在第一次平壤战争,在罗马和迦太基之间,264–公元前241年。

每个玩家有一个起始甲板的卡,他们用来执行各种行动,每轮最多两次。行动范围从殖民地,海军运动到战斗,大多数活动集中在西西里岛和撒丁岛/科西嘉岛周围。玩家还可以从他们自己的定制甲板或者玩家可以购买的一套中性卡购买额外的卡。还有策略牌,每个玩家可以购买(一个,最大),给予所有者一些特别的优势。

这个游戏是在几轮的过程中演奏,最多可以达到十二。在每一回合结束时,玩家解决随机事件,收集收入并获得胜利点。有几个胜利的路径,从简单的游戏结束时的最高分数到捕捉对手的资本。

灵感来自少量英亩的雪,这个游戏具有几个新元素包括海军,海军战斗,骑兵优势,雇佣军,野战,围城,人力,战略卡,随机事件,回合评分,贿赂和战术奖金。

游戏的名称是基于来自迦太基指挥官的一句话,他们声称在爆发敌对行动时,迦太基人对海洋的控制是这样的:罗马人甚至不敢在海里洗手。

Hands in the Sea is a two-player deck building wargame on the First Punic War, between Rome and Carthage, 264–241 BC. Each player has a starting deck of cards they use to perform various actions, up to two per round. Actions range from colonization, to naval movement, to battle, with most activity centered in and around Sicily and Sardinia/Corsica. Players may also purchase additional cards from their own custom decks, or from a set of neutral cards that either player may purchase. There are also Strategy cards that each player can purchase (one, max) that give the owning player some special advantage. The game is played over the course of several turns, up to a maximum of twelve. At the end of each turn, players resolve random events, collect income and score victory points. There are several paths to victory, ranging from simply having the highest score at the end of the game, to capturing the opposing player's capital. Inspired by A Few Acres of Snow, this game features several new elements, including navies, naval battles, cavalry superiority, mercenaries, field battles, sieges, manpower, strategy cards, random events, turn based scoring, bribery and tactical bonuses. The name of the game is based on a quote from a Carthaginian commander, who claimed at the outbreak of hostilities that the Carthaginian control of the seas was such that the Romans would not even dare wash their hands in the sea.