Difference between revisions of "Awesome Rules Concept"

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* The player has used up all the cards in her/his deck ''and'' is forced to draw another card
 
* The player has used up all the cards in her/his deck ''and'' is forced to draw another card
  
'''Tie''' breaking: In cases where two players reach 30 VP simultaneously, or all remaining players are defeated at the same time, the player with the most cities in play wins.  If more than one player has the greatest number of cities, the player with the most cards in their deck wins.
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'''Tie''' breaking:
  
''(Unclear: What if there is still a tie after counting deck cards?)''
+
* In cases where two players reach 30 VP simultaneously, or all remaining players are defeated at the same time, the player with the most cities in play wins.
 +
* If more than one player has the greatest number of cities, the player (among those players) with the most cards in their deck wins.
 +
* If more than one player also has the greatest number of cards in their decks, the game ends in a '''tie'''.
  
 
== Resource Cards ==
 
== Resource Cards ==

Revision as of 20:28, 8 August 2016


Getting Started

Basics

WTactics is a card game with free (downloadable) cards.

  • Each card in the game belongs to a specific faction. The factions are: Gaian, Dark Legion, Red Banner, House of Nobles, The Empire.
  • Each card has a card type: city, creature, enchantment, magic, or event.
  • Each player builds a deck of exactly 45 cards.
  • Each player starts with 15 Victory Points (VP).

Required Materials

To play WTactics you need a few things.

  • A deck of cards (see #Deck Building). You can download the cards, then print, cut and sleeve them.
  • Something to track victory points, such as: pen & paper; or 20-sided dice; or one of the many life counter apps
  • Something to track each city's defensive strength, such as: pen & paper; or some 6-sided dice
  • Several sets of faction counters, each set distinguishable from the others. One set for each faction in your deck. For example, green counters for Gaian, black for Dark Legion, red for Red Banner, and white for the Empire. 10 to 15 counters per faction should suffice.

Deck Building

Building your deck well is vital to success in the game. Players build their decks according to their personal playing style. Your choice of cards dictates your options during the course of the game, and directly affects how well you might fare against your opponents. As the game proceeds you will draw a given number of cards from the deck almost every round. The deck is shuffled at the start of the game, so you seldom know what cards you might draw. Usually, you would want to have a deck prepared before you sit down to play a game.

  • Every deck must contain exactly 45 cards.
  • The deck may contain cards from any combination of one or more factions, and any mixture of card types.
  • At least 3 of the 45 cards must be city cards, one city for each discipline.
  • A deck may only have up to 3 copies of a card. Cards are considered copies if they have the exact same card name.
  • Every card in WTactics may be added to a deck (subject to these deck composition rules).
  • The backs of all cards in a deck should look identical. (This can be achieved by sleeving them.)

Winning

A player wins when either:

  • All other players have been defeated, or
  • The player reaches 30 Victory Points (VP)

A player is defeated when any of the following occurs:

  • The player's Victory Points (VP) reaches 0, or
  • All of the player's cities have been destroyed, or
  • The player has used up all the cards in her/his deck and is forced to draw another card

Tie breaking:

  • In cases where two players reach 30 VP simultaneously, or all remaining players are defeated at the same time, the player with the most cities in play wins.
  • If more than one player has the greatest number of cities, the player (among those players) with the most cards in their deck wins.
  • If more than one player also has the greatest number of cards in their decks, the game ends in a tie.

Resource Cards

During the game, you can put a card from your hand face down on the table and turn it into a resource card, a source of power. Power is necessary to play cards from your hand.

  1. The card becomes a resource card for a faction of the player's choice. The faction of the card does not have to match the faction that the resource card is contributing power to.
  2. Multiple resource cards for the same faction are stacked in a pile.
  3. Each resource card should have a corresponding power gem counter (one counter per card).
  4. Counters resting next to a resource card pile indicate that that much power is available for use in the current turn.
  5. Counters resting on a resource card pile indicate power which has been consumed in the current turn.

The convention for counters used for resource cards is: Green for Gaian, Black for Dark Legion, Red for Red Banner, Blue for House of Nobles and White for The Empire.

Available (unused) power gems are necessary to play cards from your hand.

Card Layout

Let's look at a typical card layout.

Card Layout

  1. Faction Logo: The Faction logo shows which faction the card belongs to - in this case the Red Banner faction.
    Power Cost: The card's power cost will be shown here as a number. The cost is the amount of gems you will have to spend - in this case 4 gems
  2. Loyalty Marks: The loyalty marks indicate how many gems of the power cost must be paid using the faction's own gems - in this case 2 red gems for the Red Banner faction - , the remainder of the power cost can be paid using any kind of power gem.
  3. Card Art: The illustration has no impact on game play. The card art is merely for aesthetics, lending to the game's theme and setting. It also helps players quickly identify and remember cards.
  4. Card Name and Types: Every card has a unique name. Each part of the name also doubles as a subtype.
  5. Additional Card subtypes: This line contains the types(s) of the card. Each card type is governed by specific rules, while subtypes are usually related to rules found on other cards.
  6. Coloured Border: The border around a card reveals what faction it belongs to. In this example, the Imp Union Leader card has a red surrounding border, revealing--together with the faction logo--that this is a Red Banner card.
  7. Card Text: Additional abilities and rules of the card are written in this area.
  8. Flavour Text: The flavour text, always written in italics, has no impact on the rules of the game. Like the card art, it is there for interest's sake, adding to the artistic appeal of the game.
  9. Combat Statistics: The value on the left in the red circle is the unit's attack (ATK) value. The value on the right in the green shield is its defense (DEF) value. These values are used when a card engages in combat.
  10. Footer: The footer contains information about the game, and the card's "collector's number" and version.

Playing a card

A card is played in this way:

  1. The player ensures that all prerequisites (if any) written on the card are met. (If they are not satisfied, the card may not be played.)
  2. Identifying the card's faction, the player pays the card's faction power cost by moving the corresponding amount of unused power gems onto the resource cards pile.
  3. Even if the card should end up not being resolved (played)--which might occur due to interplay of rules--the spent power is not recovered or refunded during the same turn.
  4. The power gems on the resource cards pile are considered consumed for this turn, and may not be used to provide power for other plays.
  5. The card is put into play if it is resolved.

Prerequisites written on the card are often unique to the card. They vary highly from card to card.

Example prerequisite: "This card can only be played if you control fewer creatures than your opponent(s)."

Battleground Setup

The battleground (the kitchen table :-) ) is divided into several areas. Below is a depiction of the proper table setup for one of the players in a game. Each player should have the same table layout in front of them.

Awesome Rules Concept Table Layout.png

Kingdom (1)

When you build a city you place it in your Kingdom area. When creatures visit the city they become residents of that city and are placed on the same imaginary row as the city. Cities are peaceful places, so residents of a city can not launch attacks, but they defend their city bravely when attacked.

Your Army (2)

Creatures that will help launch an attack or defend against enemy attacks must be in your Army area, face up.

The Faction's Power Reserves (3)

Each faction in your deck has its own power gems.

Deck (4)

This area is where the deck resides and from where you draw new cards every time it becomes your turn.

Graveyard (5)

The area where all the discarded, used up, wasted or killed cards go. These might be, for instance, dead creatures, or used event cards. All cards in the graveyard are to remain face up, and any player may search through any player's graveyard at any time. Cards in a graveyard must remain stacked in the order that they enter the graveyard: first discarded (or used, etc.) card on the bottom, most recently discarded on the top. The Graveyard is also sometimes called the Grave.

Playing the game

Before playing the game, each player selects three cities form his/her deck, one for each of the three disciplines, and puts them on the table in the Kingdom area, face up. All players may shuffle any decks afterwards.

Each player then draws 7 cards from his/her deck, to hold in hand (not showing to the other players).

The game is played using individual player turns, that are divided into different phases. Agree on a method to choose which player will go first. The player going first is only allowed to draw one card during her/his first draw phase.

The player who is currently taking his turn is named the active player. All other players are termed passive players, even if they happen to do something (such as play Event cards) during the active player's turn. The term "the player" usually refers to the active player. In cases when the active player is not the player referred to, the terms "passive player" or "any player" are used.

Turn Structure

A player turn is made up of the following phases:

  1. Unmark
  2. Draw & Resource
  3. Tactics
  4. Play
  5. Attack
  6. Play
  7. Discard

The Play and Attack phases are optional phases. You may choose to take no action during an optional phase.

The phases must occur in the given order. You can't, for example, enter a Play phase once you have finished the Discard phase of your turn.

Unmark

  • During the unmark phase a player must unmark all his/her cards that are marked. (see #Card States)
  • The player also removes all the used power gems from the different resource piles and puts them next to each pile. The power gems are thereby replenished, and ready for re-use.
  • Unused power is not carried over into the next turn. (A player may not have more power for a faction than resource cards for that faction.)

Draw & Resource

During the draw phase, the player must take 1 of 3 possible courses of action:

  1. draw 2 cards, and play no resource cards, or
  2. draw 1 card and play 1 resource card, or
  3. play 2 resource cards, and draw no cards

There are always 2 cards involved in this phase!

Note that bullet "2." above means: it is not valid to draw only 1 card and not also play a resource card. It is also invalid to play only 1 resource card, and skip drawing a card.

Additionally: If the player has no cards in hand, (s)he must draw at least one card.

Tactics

  • During the tactics phase the player claims strategical advantages provided by her/his cities (see #Cities)

Play

  • The Play phases allow the player to use creature abilities or play any card (s)he wants to.
  • Creatures may be moved (see #Movement).
  • Players may take as many actions as they wish during Play phases, providing that they have the resources and cards to do so, and requirements for actions are met.
  • A player may choose not to do anything during a Play phase (i.e. skip that Play phase).

Attack

  • During this phase the active player's Army may attack either an opponent's army or an opponent's city.
  • Only one attack is allowed. (See #Combat for how to resolve the battle.)
  • A player may elect not to attack during a given Attack phase.

Discard

  • If the player has more than 7 cards in his/her hand, the player must discard cards from her/his hand until there are 7 cards remaining in hand.
  • A player may not discard cards from his/her hand if he/she has fewer than 8 cards in hand.


Card Types

There are 5 different card types: #Creatures, #Cities, #Events, #Magic, and #Enchantments.

Creatures

Creatures are the backbone of every army, they are the courageous forces that will bring a player glorious victory (or a miserable defeat that is best forgotten).

All creatures also belong to one or more creature types. Creature types are words separated by spaces in the card's name and subtype lines. An example of a couple of creature types a creature could have is: Leader Beast Caster. Leader would be one, Beast another type, and Caster a third creature type. They don't necessarily relate to each other in any way even if it may look like it in some cases. Creature types are relevant in many situations when other cards interact with the creature cards.

During the play phase a player may put new creatures into play by paying their power cost and then placing them into a city the player controls. Creatures may not be put into the Army directly, but they might be moved from a city to the Army at a later stage in the game. Creatures that are part of the Army can attack the opponent, as well as defend against enemy forces. Creatures that are part of a city are only able to defend against attacks on the city; they may never participate in an attack.

Fighting skills

Unlike other cards, creatures have specific and distinct values that show their fighting ability in combat:

  • Attack (ATK): The amount of damage the creature will inflict on its enemies in a single attack.
  • Defense (DEF): How much damage a creature can take before it becomes wounded and dies.

When a creature suffers damage equal to or greater than its Defense during a single turn, the creature is put in the Graveyard (of the creature's owner), along with all cards attached to it. Inflicted damage does not carry over to the next turn: If a creature was not put into the graveyard, it regains its full Defense strength at the end of the turn.

When other cards manipulate these combat values, they are often paired and written in the form ATK/DEF.

  • Example: +5/-2 would mean that a creature's attack would increase by 5, and its defense would decrease by 2.

Abilities

Creatures may have additional abilities giving them advantages (or disadvantages). Sometimes abilities only take effect when certain prerequisites are met or costs paid, such as marking the card. A card's abilities and any requirements thereof are written on the card.

Movement

  • During the Movement phase, unmarked creatures may be moved
    • from the Army to a city, or
    • from a city to the Army, or
    • from a city to another city
  • A given city may be involved in a move only once per turn (either as the origin or the destination of a move).
  • A player may only move his/her own creatures, and only among his/her own Army and cities, unless a card's abilities or effects allow otherwise.

Movement is only allowed during a player's Play phases.

To move a creature the player must:

  1. mark it,
  2. announce the move, and
  3. place it in the destination area.

Cities

Cities are the heart of your kingdom, and give you tactical advantages over your opponent.

A city belongs to a faction, and is specialized in one of the three disciplines (the 'Body', the 'Mind' or the 'Soul') as stated on the city's card. During the game setup, select three cities from your deck, one for each of the 3 disciplines. They are to be placed in your Kingdom area, face up, visible to all players. Your deck must be shuffled after you select the cities to use, to help ensure fair play.

Building a city

All players each begin the game with three cities in play. However, during a Play phase, a player may play additional city cards from his/her hand, provided the player is able to pay the city card's cost.

Residents

When a creature or player is in the city it is considered a resident.

Defending a city

The city has a defense strength. When an opponent's army attacks your city, your residents may help defend the city. Additionally your Army can help defend the city. During the course of the attack the Army's creatures that are allowed into the city are residents of the city.

Any left over unblocked attacking creature deals damage to the city. Damage dealt to a city is permanent and the lost defense strength is not restored after the turn. (You can keep track of the city's defense strength by placing 6-sided die beside it). When the city's strength is reduced to or beyond 0, it is destroyed, and its owner must put it in her/his Graveyard.

When all of a player's cities in play are destroyed, that player is defeated.

Advantages

During a Tactics phase, cities can be made to provide their owner strategical advantages. These advantages last until the player's next Tactics phase.

To claim an advantage for a discipline, a player:

  1. declares his/her claim for the discipline, such as by saying the words 'I claim advantage for Body ' (or Mind or Soul), and
  2. marks any number of unmarked residents of her/his cities
  • Opponents may mark any unmarked residents of their cities in response.
  • Whichever player has the greater sum of power costs of marked cards wins the bid, and gains 1 Victory Point.
  • When there is a tie for greatest sum, the player stating the claim wins the bid.
  • When a city is destroyed, the owning player no longer enjoys the advantage.

Events

  • Event cards represent one-time effects. When an event card is played, its resolution is determined and its effects occur immediately. In CCG terminology these are commonly known as interrupts or instants.
  • Any player may play an event card at any time, even during an opponent's turn as a response to something (s)he has done.
  • When an event card is played, resolution is determined based on its rules text.
  • After an event card has been used, it is discarded the same turn it was played. The owner places it in his/her Graveyard.
  • There is no limit to the number of consecutive Events that players may play at any time, even as responses to opponent Events.
  • All players are to play their Event cards in one specific, shared spot on the table. In cases where more than one player plays an event card at almost the same time, whoever physically places their card on the designated Event spot first gets to have their event card resolved first.

Magic

  • Magic cards may only be played during the player's own turn, and only during a Play phase.
  • Once a magic card has been played, it is discarded into Graveyard.

Enchantments

  • Enchantment cards may only be played during the player's own Play phases.
  • Enchantments always have a target.
  • Some examples of targets: the player, a city, a creature, a resource card, another enchantment
  • An enchantment is attached to its target
  • Enchantments remain in play until some effect removes them, potentially across many phases and turns.
  • (Unclear: When an enchantment is removed, is the enchantment card placed into the Graveyard?)

Card States

In Play

When a card is legally moved from hand, main deck, cities deck or grave onto the game table it is entering play, and if nothing hinders it the card is then in play.

All cards that have been paid for, if any, are considered to be in play. Typically that would be all permanents that are on the table, like your creatures and enchantments. Events, effects of abilities and Magic are technically speaking also in play for a very short moment: They enter play, are in play, resolve and then become discarded into the grave - leaving play.

Marked & Unmarked

  • Cards in play are always in either a marked or an unmarked state.
  • Cards not in play cannot be marked or unmarked.
  • Cards come into play in the unmarked state, unless the rules of some card used in the game clearly specify otherwise.
  • The marked state is normally used to show that a card has been exhausted or used somehow.
    • Examples of when a card becomes marked: When a creature attacks, moves, or uses an activated ability that requires it to mark.
  • To mark a card, orient it horizontally (landscape, as opposed to portrait).
  • A marked card cannot be marked again. Only an unmarked card can be marked.
  • Some effects or rules can unmark a marked card.
  • There is no limit on how many times a card can become marked or unmarked if these state changes happen legally as a result of effects.
  • Each player gets all of his/her marked cards unmarked during her/his own unmark phase of his/her turn.

Mark me

The Mark Me symbol

Some actions, abilities and rules require a card to be marked when the player wants to use it in a particular way. Marking is not a cost. It should rather be seen as a kind of prerequisite, an action that needs to happen in order for an effect to happen. Whenever the mark me symbol is shown (a horizontal rectangle with a symbol within, MarkSmall.png ) it means that you have to mark the card itself if that is a prerequisite for whatever you're trying to accomplish.

Not in Play

  • A card that is not in the in play state is considered to be not in play.
  • All the cards in a players hand, main deck, cities deck and grave are examples of cards that are not in play until their owner pays their play cost and meets any other requirements so that they can be put in play.
  • There is a distinction between being "in play" and "was played".
    • Card types that can stay on the table (permanents) are put "in play".
    • Cards that don't stay on the table after they "were played" are not considered to be "in play" after they are played. For example, an Event card that is discarded immediately after the player tries to trigger its effect is not considered "in play".

Removed from Game

A card that has been removed from the game is in a state distinct from the in play and not in play states. A card removed from the game ceases to exist for all intents and purposes for the remainder of the game. Removed from game cards are not placed in the Grave. They are to be placed in a pile more distant from the game, since there will be no interaction with them while playing.

There is a huge difference between cards not in play and cards removed from the game: Cards not in play are still a part of the game and might come into play at some point. Cards in hand or in the deck or even in the grave are examples of cards not in play. In contrast, cards that have been removed from the game may never in any way become part of the current game.

Combat

  • Only unmarked creatures may attack or defend.
  • The active player is the only one that may perform attacks, and only during his/her Attack phase.
    • When attacking, the player must use one or more creatures in his/her army and declare the target of the attack: either the opponent's army, or one of the opponent's cities.
  • Only the attacked player may employ his/her creatures in defense of an attack. Other players may not lend their forces to defend.
  • Combat is resolved on a per attacker basis: Each attacker (together with all its blockers) is part of one single and specific battle.
  • The order in which battles are resolved may affect the outcome of other battles or states in the game.
  • Before combat begins, the attacking player decides and announces the order in which the attacking creatures will assault the opposition.
  • The defending player must decide if or how (s)he will defend, and which creatures (s)he will assign to defend against which attacking creatures.
  • The attacking player must declare his/her full attack plan before the defending player declares her/his defense strategy. The attacking player may not change his/her attack plan (by switching targets, or adding or removing creatures from the assault) once the defender has begun declaring her/his defense plan.

Combat sequence

I. Announcing attackers

  • The attacking player may choose to attack during an Attack phase using any number of unmarked creatures in his/her Army.
    • Creatures assigned to attack are called attackers.
  • The attacking player chooses and announces all attackers that will fight that turn by marking them & announcing them as attackers.
  • The attacking player chooses the army or city he/she is attacking. (You can not attack your own cities)
  • In cases where there are more than one attackers the attacking player must announce and choose the order of the attacks, which is first, then second, and so on.
  • Once the attackers are announced, the passive player gets a Response phase, that gives him/her the opportunity to play one Event card or one Ability (but not both at the same time).
    • The attacking player then gets the same opportunity, and this process is repeated until both players make a pass on the opportunity to play something in the Response phase. When the players pass on the Response phase the attack continues as follows:

II. Choosing defenders

  • All creatures assigned to defend are called defenders for the duration of the battle.
  • The defending player may choose to:
    • Defend one or more of the attack(s) with one or more creatures from his/her Army or the attacked city (if a city was attacked).
      • A specific defender can only defend against one single attacker.
      • Several defenders can be assigned to the same attacker.
    • Allow the attacks to go on undefended.
    • If the defending player decides not to defend the attack on his/her city, it loses defense strength equal to the total amount of damage dealt by the attackers.
    • If the defending player decides not to defend the attack on his/her army he/she lose Victory Points equal to the total amount of damage dealt by the attackers.

III. Resolving combat

  • Each individual combat takes place. In each combat the players take turns with Response phases.
  • When both players pass instead of responding to the other player's actions the combat is resolved:
    • Take into account all effects and then compare the values of the Attackers ATK value with the Defenders DEF value.
      • If it is higher or equal the Defender will die. If it is lower the Defender will survive.
      • Regardless of the outcome the Defender successfully protects the defending players city/player from that attacker.
      • Compare the Defender's ATK value with the Attackers DEF value - if it is equal to or higher then the Attacker will die.
  • When combat is over place all dead Creatures into the discard piles, along with all Events that were used during the combat and also any cards that were attached to the Creatures.


Additional Rules

Conflicting rules

As in many games some rules and mechanics may seem to contradict themselves and even do so at times. This is actually a feature and what makes the deep, complex and modular nature of a CCG possible to begin with. Always use the following two rules to resolve such situations:

Cards vs rules

  • If a card contradicts the core rules found in this document, the card wins over the core rules.

Effects vs effects

  • If an effects forbids something to happen while another allows it, the forbidding effect always wins.
    • Example: A creature has the effect "Can not fly." printed on it as card text. Playing a spell on the creature with the text "Target creature can fly." will not make the creature able to fly. The "not/no/can't" etc always outweigh what "can" happen.

Abilities

Many creatures have special skills and some are able to perform different kind of actions. There are numerous ways how the creatures can interact with one and another without engaging in actual physical combat. These skills are called abilities, regardless of what they do, and if they have any drawbacks or not.

Abilities are not limited to just creatures, magic could have them as well, granting a creature additional abilities they wouldn't have without them.

There are three main types of abilities : activated, passive and triggered.

Passive

A passive ability is one that is always in effect. As soon as the object with the ability enters play, the ability effect starts, and stops when the object leaves play.

Example: "All Elvish creatures gets +3 defense" is a passive ability.

Activated

  • In contrast to passive abilities, activated abilities requires the activation by the player.
  • To use a card's ability the player must pay the cost required. The effect of the ability will not activate before that is done.
  • Only the controller of a card may activate it's abilities. Usually that means the player that put the card in play by paying for it.

There are three main groups of costs and prerequisites that are used to activate abilities: Gold cost, mark and custom. What's always common for all types of costs and prerequisites is that we always reveal the cost first, followed by a colon separator, and lastly the effect is written. It looks like this:

Cost : Effect

Whatever is on the left side of the colon (:) is the cost or prerequisites. The text on the right side of the colon is the card's effect that will activate once you have met the cost/prerequisites demands.

Triggered

  • A triggered ability is activated if and only if it's trigger takes place.
  • Triggered abilities are not optional and must always be applied if possible.
    • If a triggered ability's effect can't be applied then nothing happens.
  • Example: Discard a non-Dark Legion creature every time a skeleton comes into play.
    • If my opponent played that curse on you, and your opponent puts a skeleton into play, then you must discard a non-Dark Legion creature. If you have only Dark Legion creatures however, then it is not possible for you to discard a creature, in which case you don't have to do anything.

Variable Gold Costs

Cost of X

This card costs X gold.
  • Apart from integers, a card can have a cost of X, as well as X with a modifier. If that is the case, X is always defined in the card text.
    • Example: A card costs X + 2. It's text says that X is equal to the ATK value of the target creature. The target creature's ATK is equal to 3, thus we'd have to pay 3 + 2 = 5 gold to play our card.

Disclaimer & info

  • These rules are, in their current state, only intended for developers that work on the same ruleset as ngoeminne, which is dubbed "the Awesome Rules Concept", or ARC in short.
  • Lingual edits are allowed by anyone as long as they keep the semantics and logic of the game, the intention of a rule and so on, fully intact and don't change how the game works.
  • Rule-edits are allowed only after being cleared with ngoeminne first.
  • The ARC intends to live up to the General Design Document & the Local Design Document for the ORC.
  • All content in here can and will likely change as we continue development, concept- & playtesting and revising. Nothing in here represents the finalized game nor should it be seen as set in stone.
  • Questions? Please post them in our forum after mailing us for an account in there or mail them.