The Tao of Gaming

Boardgames and lesser pursuits

Posts Tagged ‘Federation Commander

Random news

So, I get an order from GMT games saying my game has shipped.

Hurm.

I have a head full of pollen; but no recollection of what I ordered. But best to see. It arrived today. Ah, it’s Churchill, the 3player card driven WWII game. Cool!

I flip the box over and what do I see? A monstrous hex map staring at me! This isn’t Churchill, it’s Unconditional Surrender. That’s right, I ordered both. But I thought I’d cancelled this one (after getting more details). Ah well, this can be the game I always want to play and never play. Actually, I might very well be able to. It looks like you can use the training scenarios to work up from a small few unit fight up. This may be my summer project. And the TaoLing may be able to handle it at some point.

Right now the game I always want to play isn’t many, and the games I never play are legion. I’ve played 12 games in the last 30 days , and that includes bridge session. This is about 1/4 (or less) of what I’d normally play, and yet I’m not raring to play random games (although I do have a session of Fed Com for Monday).

I haven’t even played Mage Knight in two months. I should, but I need table space.

Ah well, there’s news from the Gathering. You should read it. But not here.

In non-gaming news:

  • Adventure Time is Smowzow.
  • My new job (the reason for not going to N.F.) is nice. Jacqui works in the same building, so we carpool. It’s adorable.
  • I’m working through the Shield and the Sopranos. I’ve petered out on Supernatural (but I made it to season 6 or 7). I may pick it back up.
  • I need to go see Winter Soldier. Maybe Sunday.
  • My guitar playing is ok, but David Bowie uses obscure chords way too often for me to be able to play my favorites.
  • Welcome to Nightvale. I’ve succumbed. I thought they couldn’t pull it off past the first episode, but they have. (At least, I’m up to the mid 20s).
  • My allergist (a gamer) says I’m allergic to nothing, but there’s so much gunk in the air I’m still sneezing, sore throat, etc.
  • (Update) Based on a recent comic by XKCD I downloaded the Kerbal Space Program simulator. It’s fun and the potential for a real time sink.

I’m going to bed.

Written by taogaming

April 18, 2014 at 8:27 pm

Why I’ve got little to say

I’m playing the same games over and over. Right now I have five Quarters for the year, and only one of them (Coup) is short (and I have almost 50 plays of that). Netrunner is fairly fast (~20 minutes) but  I’m over 80 games so far. The others are Bridge (2-3 hours per session), Sentinels of the Multiverse & Mage Knight,

At my current rate, The City is likely to make it to 25+ games but that’s it.

And none of the newer games have really captured my attention (except Federation Commander).

I suppose at some point I could write a few thousand words about The City, but honestly I’m not sure that anything I say would be non-obvious. I do believe that fountains win slightly more than any of the alternate strategies, possibly because of the number of synergy cards.

But that’s all I’ve got right now.

Actually, while I’m rambling I’ve slightly burned out on Bridge, and have cut back my number of club games in the last month or two. It was bound to happen after ~5 years of pretty constant play. Having a terrible regional didn’t help.

Also, while I’m thinking about it. Congrats to David Grainger on his first (US) National Victory. (He’s won a Canadian National event). I met David at the Gathering this spring, and he was at the San Antonio Regional, where his team unsurprisingly destroyed mine in the evening Knock Outs.

Written by taogaming

August 17, 2013 at 11:13 am

Federation Commander

Back in North Carolina at the (defunct for a decade-ish) Cerebral Hobbies, at one time they had a LAN for games. The only game that really interested me was Star Fleet Commander. The computerized version of Star Fleet Battles.

I played SFB, off and on, for 5 years. I mainly played tournament duels –were short enough that you could play them in 2-3 hours and ‘only’ involved several hundred pages of rules. A gentle monster.

Needless to say, I stopped playing around the time I had kids.

Anyway, I recently got a chance to try the streamlined SFB — Federation Commander. Federation Commander brings SFB into the new millenium. Nicer components — double sided hard board maps (with small or large hexes), laminated ships (that you mark on with dry erase markers and use paper clips to track energy), small or large counters. But, at it’s heart, it’s SFB.

The rules are similar enough that when I skimmed them for the ‘intro’ game I basically just went “Same, Same, etc.” Here’s what you need to know if you haven’t played SFB.

  1. Each ship produces energy
  2. On a turn you set your base speed (0, 8, 16, or 24)
  3. You have 8 impulses, and each impulse you move 0-3 (base speed divided by 8) but you can spend energy to gain an extra hex or to not move. You have turn modes and side slips.
  4. After everyone moves, you can fire weapons. They (surprise) cost energy. If you do you roll some dice, compare range, and mark off damage to the shields. Do 10+ points of damage and some of it will get past the shields (and a computer will explode, killing a redshirt). Of course, enough damage will knock shields down.
  5. Damage that gets past shields causes you to roll on a chart to damage systems …. you cross off the box on the ship and can’t use that any more.

There’s a ton more. Lots of weapons systems, missiles, tractors, transporters, various space terrain, All familiar to SFB veterans. What is missing is the fiddly Energy Allocation … in SFB you had to pre-plan all of your energy (minus a few points that were in your batteries, which you could allocate later). So you have 40 points of energy, put 1 to life support, 18 to movement (possibly changing speeds mid turn), 8 to Photon Torpedos, maybe a few points to shields, etc etc.

Federation Commander’s “Pay as you go” system simplifies that. They drop a bunch of book-keeping as well. Pick your speed, pay the energy.

SFB also had 32 move/fire decisions a turn. Grouping them into 8 moves (with a few sub moves) and then fire speeds things up. There are a few rules that could stand to be incorporated from SFB (I’m looking at you, 8 impulse minimum delay in weapon firing), but the vast majority of things that were dropped (however cool) were fiddly or rare.

The classic “Enterprise versus Klingon” duel, which took hours, was done in about one (with a pause or two while I clarified key points). Granted, I’ve played a good chunk of SFB, and my opponent had played 5+ games of FC, but this wasn’t just a drop to point blank range and exchange fire … we lobbed drones, I maneuvered around outside of overload range (I was the Klingon), then gave up a damaging shot for a turn of chasing the Enterprise while it reloaded (thankfully for me, the photons didn’t do much damage) and pasting him hard before he reloaded and made a decisive high energy turn into me. Sadly, decisive in my favor. This took 4-5 turns (an eternity in Star Fleet Time).

If you play with more ships, you can flip the laminated ship cards over to roughly halve all the numbers (power, shields, weapons) for a fleet game. Haven’t tried that, but I imagine it works the same.

So, this is the kind of thing you’ll like if you liked that kind of thing. If you are new to Star Fleet Battles there’s a lot going on … I imagine the base rules for your first game are going to be ~50 pages. But some of us already know most of them.

Rating — Suggest (if you already know SFB and like it).

 

Written by taogaming

June 10, 2013 at 11:15 pm