Homeworlds Settlers

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Revision as of 09:37, 23 December 2020 by imported>Cuc
Homeworlds Settlers
Bruno Curfs
Players vie for resources on a conquered Homeworld.
:Players Players: 2
:Time Length: Medium
:Complexity Complexity: Medium
Trios per color: 3
Number of colors: 4
Pyramid trios:
Monochr. stashes: 4
Five-color sets: 3
- - - - - - Other equipment - - - - - -
Homeworlds Settlers Board
Setup time: 1 minute
Playing time: 15 minutes - 40 minutes
Strategy depth: High
Random chance: None
Game mechanics: Board, Movement, Placement, Color powers, Resource Management
Theme: Territory
BGG Link:
Status: Complete (v1.0), Year released: 2020


Homeworlds Settlers is a deep abstract strategy game for two players that uses a Homeworlds Set. Players vie for the resources and territory on the Homeworld that was conquered in the prequel: Homeworlds. Homeworlds Settlers borrows thematic elements from Homeworlds.

ChangeLog

20201222 - Updated rules (V2), clarifying the third option for Green actions. You forfeit your unused actions, but are allowed to build Green. Clarifying that conquered Red ships can be used on the same turn. Some minor edits.

Setup

Place the board (see Homeworlds Settlers Board) between the players, tilted 45 degrees (like a diamond), so that a corner points to each player.

Set up the Bank. To do so, stack the pyramids by size and group them by color: Large to Small from back to front; the colors in the order Red, Yellow, Green, and Blue from left to right. Put the bank next to the board where both players can reach it.

Gameplay

Decide who begins. Players take turns.

On your turn, you get one or more actions, based on the size and color of a piece you own on the board. See Using Actions.

If you don’t have a valid action available, you are forced to pass.

Using Actions

Action Choose a piece you own, this is the action piece. Its color determines the action type: Red ~ Conquer, Yellow ~ Move, Green ~ Build, Blue ~ Trade/Upgrade. Its pip-size determines the number of actions of that action type. Note. If you don’t own a piece, you can Build (see under Green). In particular, your first move consists of building a Small Green.

Definition.

  • Bordering - Two fields are bordering each other if they are horizontally, vertically, or diagonally adjacent. A piece on a bordering field is called a bordering piece.

For each pip of the action piece, you get one optional action of the action type associated with its color. You can choose how to use each action according to the following. Unused action pips are forfeited by the end of your turn.

  • Red ~ Conquer. You can conquer an opponent’s piece bordering your Red action piece if a.) the piece you try to conquer is not larger than your conquering piece, AND b.) the total pip count of all of your Red pieces bordering the opponent’s piece is larger than the total pip count of all the opponent’s Red pieces bordering it (and if the attacked piece is Red, then its pips must also be counted). To conquer a piece, turn it 180 degrees on its field, pointing away from you. Note. Red pieces can therefore attack (on your turn) and defend (on your opponent’s turn). Once you conquered an opponent's ship, it counts as yours, even in your current move if you still have actions available.
  • Yellow ~ Move. Make a partition (n1, n2, n3) of the number of pips n of your chosen Yellow action piece, such that n1 + n2 + n3 = n. For each number in your partition, choose a moving piece, EITHER the said Yellow action piece OR a piece bordering to where said Yellow action piece now is; move the moving piece the corresponding number of bordering spaces using only unoccupied fields. Note. If n = 1, there is only one partition, i.e., (1): you can only move 1 piece over 1 space. If n = 2, there are two partitions, i.e., (2) and (1, 1): you can EITHER move 1 piece over 2 spaces, OR 2 pieces over 1 space each. If n = 3, there are three partitions, i.e., (3), (2, 1), (1,1,1): you can EITHER a.) move 1 piece over 3 spaces, OR b.) 1 piece over 2 spaces and another piece over 1 space, OR c.) 3 pieces over 1 space each.
  • Green ~ Build. For each pip of your chosen Green action piece, check these conditions:
    • If your chosen Green action piece has an empty bordering field (it “has space”), you can build there a piece from the Bank in any color; take the smallest piece in that color available from the Bank, and place it there. Note. If any of your Green pieces “has space”, you must build there first before checking the other conditions.
    • If all fields bordering your chosen Green action piece have become occupied (it “runs out of space”), choose any other Green piece you own with an empty bordering field. Continue as if you started your turn choosing this as your action piece. Note. Consider this a bonus turn. The unused actions of the previous action piece are forfeited. The successively chosen Green piece can be of any size. You can have more than one bonus turn, if a successively chosen Green piece also “runs out of space” and you still have one or more unused action pips.
    • If there is no empty field bordering ANY of your Green pieces (or if you don’t own a Green piece), you can only build the smallest Green piece available from the Bank anywhere on an empty field. Note. If there aren’t any Green pieces left in the Bank, you can not use this action.
  • Blue ~ Upgrade/Trade. You can Upgrade or Trade the chosen Blue action piece or any bordering piece you own. To Upgrade a piece, replace it with a piece of the same color and exactly 1 pip larger, available from the Bank. To Trade a piece, replace it with a piece of the same size and different color, available from the Bank. Note. If the piece you need is not available from the Bank, you can not use this action type. Any piece you return to the Bank is immediately available for the next Upgrade/Trade, if you have unused actions. If you have more than 1 available action, you can trade AND upgrade the same piece (in any order), OR upgrade the same piece twice (to get a Large).

End

  • End. The game ends when all pieces are placed, OR both players do not have a valid move, OR both players pass consecutively.
  • Win. Each player scores the number of points equal to the total pip count of the pieces they own on the board. Max score wins. Note. If one of the players has more than 36 points, they win.
  • Tie Break. In case both players score an equal number of points, then the player with the most number of Large pieces wins. If it’s still a tie, the player with the most number of Medium pieces wins. If it’s still a tie, then the game is a draw.

Strategy

  • This game is quite deep and, just as Homeworlds, has a large number of options available during each move. Beginners will likely be overwhelmed with the possibilities. Play the game a couple of times to understand the dynamics. See also the Variants.
  • Keep Green pieces that “have space” positioned at the border of your settlement. If you don’t have any empty fields bordering a Green piece you own, and the Bank doesn’t have Green pieces, you can’t build. If this happens, it is unlikely that you will be able to build again. But you could have a clever move using a Medium (or Large) Blue piece: trade one of your Greens for another color available from the Bank, and then another of your pieces at the border (bordering to the Blue action piece) for that Green you just put back in the Bank.
  • The beginning of the game seems to be about the power balance of Red. It is a quite balanced battle, but the use of Yellow can shift the balance. There is a Yellow/Red dynamic that allows Red pieces to infiltrate and wreak havoc if unchecked by the opponent. Stay on guard for the possibilities of Red pieces moving to unexpected places.
  • During the middle game, there is a Green/Blue dynamic that allows for rapid (exponential?) growth if unchecked by the opponent.
  • The endgame may allow the use of Yellow/Red to conquer a few more pieces, and smart use of Yellow/Blue/Green to trade/upgrade/build another few points.

Variants

Redless. Play by the same rules except remove all Red pieces from the game. Note. To practice the use of Green/Blue, it is instructive to try the game without using Red at all. There will be only 27 pieces in the game, so not the whole board will be occupied by the end of the game.

Handicapping. The weaker player can start with a Medium or even a Large Green, but the stronger player starts the game.

Acknowledgments

Chris Cieslik designed a game called Landing Zone and published the rules on the Facebook Starship Captains group. It inspired me to design this game.

Creative Commons

This game is designed by Cuc licensed under the Creative Commons International BY-NC-SA 4.0 License.

Official rules (V2) can be found here: Homeworlds Settlers Rules. Note. The official rule document has some extra info regarding acknowledgments, designer notes, and the board dimensions.

Feedback Welcome

Questions, remarks and suggestions are welcome. (Use the Talk: Homeworlds Settlers page for discussion.) Thank you.