This is an AutoGeneratedTextVersion of Magistratvm
MAGISTRATVM A Group Projects game for the piecepack Date 1 November 2004 version 1.1 Number of Players 3 or 4 Game Length 90-120 min Designers Brad Johnson & Phillip Lerche Copyright ©2003 the designers Equipment needed a) 1 standard piecepack; b) about $2 in change to represent gold (ideal breakdown would be 50 x 1c, 10 x 5c, 10 x 10c; c) tokens such as pieces from the game of Risk in 4 different colors to use as influence markers (20 per player); d) a printout of the Table of Offices and summary sheet from the end of these rules Introduction Welcome to the Roman Republic! Each player will control a family of Patricians that will vie for political control of the Rome and her Provinces using wealth and influence. The player with the most influence in the Offices of Rome and the Provinces will win the game. Setup The tiles represent the Roman Provinces. Each Province has a value from 1 (ace) to 6 (null). Shuffle the tiles face down. Randomly choose 6 tiles and turn them face up in 2 columns of 3 tiles each. These tiles form the contested Provinces of the electoral circuit. Contested Provinces are those that have not held an election with a majority outcome. Provinces that have been won by a player gaining a majority in an election are considered decided, and are placed in the Family Estates. At the start of the game there are no decided Provinces. The value of the tile is the amount of political influence the province is worth at the end of the game. Keep the remaining tiles near the play area they will enter the game when new provinces are added to the electoral circuit. Each player takes the die, pawn and six coins of one suit. Each player also takes the 20 influence tokens in the color that matches (or is closest to) the color of his or her suit and places them in front of him- or herself as the Family Estate, along with the matching pawn which indicates the suit of the player. Place the gold as a central bank. If the bank runs out of gold, simply add more. The political maneuvering in Rome itself is played out through the political Offices table. Place the Offices of Rome table near the Provinces so that everyone can clearly see it. In four player games all of the spaces with a circle are available. If three are playing then the gray circles are ignored. The values inside the circles indicate how much influence a Magistrate is worth at the end of the game and during elections. The values inside the arrows indicate how much gold it costs to move between the levels. The coins represent Patricians and will be placed on the Offices table as Magistrates. Magistrates are always initially placed suit-side up with the tick-mark pointing to 12 o'clock. A Magistrate with the tick-mark at 12 o'clock is available to take an action, and is referred to as active. The values of the coins have no game relevance. If a Patrician is recalled (from a decided Province or Office) then the Patrician is returned to its Family Estate. Players start the game with all of their Patricians in the Family Estate. The Offices give influence to the Magistrates and also provide special actions (see below). Magistrates are turned 90 degrees to the left (so that the tick-mark is at 3 o'clock) after certain actions have been taken during the game. A turned Magistrate is inactive. Active Magistrates can also use their influence during the election phase (see below). Magistrates can also be placed in decided provinces as Governors. Governors are neither active nor inactive. During setup, each player rolls a die. The player who rolls the highest (ace=1, null=6) is the Prefect at the beginning of the game and places his or her pawn on the Prefect space of the Offices. Re-roll if there are ties. All players now set their dice in their Family Estates with the null-face uppermost these are the Income dice. A player's Income die provides gold to that player throughout the game. Each time a player uses his or her die it is turned to the next lower number (null=6, ace=1). Once a die shows an ace (1) it remains showing the ace value for the rest of the game. Aim The aim of the game is to win political control of the Republic. The two areas of play are the Provinces in the electoral circuit and the Offices. Players will place influence tokens in the Provinces in the hope of winning provincial elections which provide influence. Magistrates and Governors also provide influence, and can be used to take special actions which will help players defeat their rivals. The game ends once all 24 Provinces have been decided, in which case the player with the most influence from both the Provinces and the Offices wins. Game play The game is played in a series of turns. Each turn consists of the following phases: 1. Income phase all players receive gold income. 1. Bidding phase players bid for the privilege of the role of Prefect. 1. Action phase starting with the Prefect and moving clockwise, players carry out actions in the Provinces and Offices until all players pass in succession. 1. Election phase the Prefect determines where the electoral circuit will start, and an election is held in each contested Province. 1. End of turn phase several housekeeping actions occur Income Phase Players gain income in 4 ways: based on current influence in the contested Provinces; from decided Provinces they govern; from the special action of the Quaestor Office; and by using the Income die. Gold that is not used by the end of the turn is returned to the bank, so players need to budget wisely for their campaigns in the Provinces and the Offices during the action phase! 1. Provincial influence For each influence token a player has adjacent to the Provinces that player receives 1 gold. On the first turn no player has any influence in the Provinces. The maximum amount of gold that can be gained this way is therefore 20. Example: Susan has 12 of her influence tokens placed adjacent to the Provinces, so she gains 12 gold from the bank. (Note that in the middle and late game it is often easier to count tokens in the player Estate and subtract that number from 20 to calculate provincial income). 2. Governed Provinces If a player has a Governor on a decided Province, and the Province has gold on it, the gold is always available for the player to use throughout the turn. Provincial gold does not have to be returned to the bank at the end of the turn. Players do not have to state how much provincial gold they wish to use in a turn, it is always available to the player as long as the Province is governed. 3. Quaestor Office Special Action Most of the special actions associated with the Offices occur in the Offices phase, however the Quaestor special function is associated with the income phase. Each Quaestor earns its owner 3 gold. After using the special action, the Quaestor is turned 90 degrees so that its tick-mark points to 3 o'clock. Players may choose not to use the special action, leaving the Quaestor active for subsequent promotion or other action. 4. Income die The player may choose to take gold from the bank equal to the value showing on the face of the die. The player then turns the die to show the next lowest number. Null = 6, ace = 1. Note that while this is optional, during the first turn of the game players this is the only way players can gain income. Bidding Phase The player who currently holds the office of Prefect begins an auction for the position of Prefect in the coming turn. This position is powerful as it is the Prefect who decides which Province will be the first to hold an election at the end of a turn. The Prefect is also always the first player to take an action in each phase. The current Prefect always bids first, and may bid any amount of gold he or she has, including zero. Then, in clockwise order, each player bids an amount of gold, which must be at least 1 more than the previous bid, or passes. Players may not bid more gold than they currently possess. A player who passes may not re-enter the bidding. Once everyone has passed, the player who bid the highest places his or her pawn and the gold that he or she bid on the Prefect space of the Table of Offices. All other players keep the gold that they bid. If the current Prefect bid zero and everyone subsequently passes, then that player retains the Office of Prefect, and there will be no gold associated with the position. Action Phase In clockwise order, starting with the Prefect, each player carries out one of the possible actions until all players consecutively pass. Play continues in clockwise order as long as at least one player wishes to and is able to conduct an action. Players may take any of the following actions, which may be repeated by the same player later in the same phase. The possible actions are: 1. Pay to place one or more influence tokens adjacent to a Province 2. Promote a Patrician to an Office 3. Promote an active Magistrate within the Offices 4. Use an active Magistrate to take a special Office action 5. Appoint an active Magistrate as Governor in one of your decided Provinces 6. Transfer a Governor to your Family Estate 7. Pass 1. Pay to place one or more influence tokens adjacent to a Province Each influence token counts as 1 vote in an election. The 1st token a player places next to a single province costs 1 gold. Players pay 2 gold for the 2nd token placed, 3 gold for the 3rd, 4 gold for the 4th, etc. If a player has placed all of his or her tokens, or cannot afford to place more, then that player may no longer choose this action. Players may place 1 or more tokens when taking this action. Influence token placement has one restriction: if influence tokens have already been placed in a Province, when another player wishes to place tokens he or she must equal or exceed the highest number of tokens any single player has already placed in the Province. This rule only applies when a player takes this action, and does not apply during elections or when taking special Magistrate actions (see below). Example: It is the first turn of the game and Susan won the auction for Prefect. She places one of her influence tokens adjacent to a 6-Province. This costs her 1 gold, as it is the first token she is placing in this particular Province. Paul places 2 tokens in the same Province. He pays 1+2=3 gold. In order to place tokens in the 6-Province, Quentin must now place at least 2 tokens there (to equal or better Paul's influence). He decides to place 1 token in a 4-Province instead, paying 1 gold. Rebecca pays 3 gold and places 2 of her tokens in the 6-Province where Susan and Paul placed tokens. Susan places 1 token in the 4-Province alongside Quentin's token, which costs her 1 gold. On a later turn in the game, Susan has 6 tokens in a Province, Rebecca has 4, and Paul and Quentin have none. In order for Rebecca to place tokens in the Province she must place at least th 2 of them to match Susan's 6. This will cost Rebecca 5+6=11 gold, as they would be her 5 and th 6 tokens assigned to the Province. If Susan decides to place her 7th token there it will cost her 7 gold. If Quentin (or Paul) decides to try and compete in the Province he must place at least 6 tokens there, at a cost of 1+2+3+4+5+6=21 gold. 2. Promote a Patrician to an open Tribune, Quaestor or Aedile Office space If there is an available space in the Tribune or Quaestor row of the Offices table, a Patrician from the Family Estate may be placed there at a cost of 1 gold. The Patrician is placed in the inactive position. Patricians can be placed directly to an available Aedile Office, but the payment is cumulative, i.e. the cost to promote a Patrician from the Family Estate to Aedile is 1+2=3 gold. This action may not be used to place a patrician any higher in the table than the rank of Aedile, and cannot be chosen if there are no available spaces at the level of Quaestor, Tribune and Aedile. Note that in a 4-player game all of the office spaces are available. If three are playing, the gray spaces are not in play 3. Promote a Magistrate within the Offices An active Magistrate may be moved from its current Office to a higher Office by paying the cost to advance shown in the arrow. Magistrates can be promoted more than one level, but the payment is cumulative. eg The cost to promote a Magistrate from Quaestor to Praetor is 2+4=6 gold. If a vacant space exists in the new level, the Magistrate is simply placed there in the inactive state. A vacant space in the new level need not exist for a Magistrate to be promoted. If no space exists the promotion will result in the displacement of a rival Magistrate downwards in the Office table. The player owning the Magistrate that is moving up chooses which rival Magistrate will be displaced downwards. When a displacement occurs as the result of a Magistrate being promoted several levels, the Magistrate chosen to be displaced is moved down only 1 level, and if this results in a further displacement the player owning the first displaced Magistrate now decides which rival Magistrate will be secondarily displaced. Both active and inactive Magistrates can be displaced, however displaced Magistrates always retain their status. Displaced Quaestors or Tribunes are returned to the Family Estates. Note that Magistrates are always made inactive after they have been promoted. Example: Susan wishes to promote her Magistrate from Tribune to Consul. She pays 2+4+6=12 gold to the bank. The two Consul spaces are occupied by Magistrates belonging to Rebecca and Paul. Susan chooses to displace Rebecca's Consul. Rebecca then moves her Magistrate down one level to Praetor. The four Praetor spaces are currently occupied, and Rebecca takes revenge by displacing Susan's Praetor. Susan then must place her Praetor one level lower. She places her displaced Praetor as an Aedile. 4. Take one special Magistrate action The Offices have special actions associated with them. To take a special Magistrate action the Magistrate must be active. After the action is taken the Magistrate must be made inactive. The available Magistrate actions are: Tribune place one influence token in the Province of your choice at no cost Quaestor take 3 gold during the income phase Aedile move one influence token owned by any player from one contested province to another Praetor return up to 2 influence tokens (belonging to any player) from any single Province to their owner(s) Consul recall one Magistrate (belonging to any player) from Office or one Governor from a Province (You may not recall a Dictator or Censor) Censors have no special function other than the influence they provide. The special function of the Dictator occurs during the election phase (see below). 5. Appoint a Governor Move one of your active Magistrates from an Office to a decided Province you control that does not already have a Governor. 6. Transfer a Governor to your Family Estate Move one of your Governors from one of your decided provinces to your Family Estate 7. Pass Passing does not prevent a player from subsequently taking an action if they wish, however once all players have passed the action phase immediately ends. Election Phase There are three parts to the election phase. 1. If the Dictator's Office is occupied there is a Dictatorial `election' 2. The Prefect then declares where the electoral circuit will begin 3. The electoral circuit occurs with each province holding an election in turn 1. Dictatorial election. If there is a Dictator, then the player controlling the Dictator must choose 1 province where he or she has at least 1 influence token, which the player automatically wins, i.e. the rules for normal elections do not apply. The influence tokens of the all players are immediately returned to their Estates. The decided Province is removed from the central area and placed as part of that player's Estate. Any gold that was on the Province remains there. The Magistrate in the Dictator position is then placed as Governor in the won province or returned to the Family Estate, i.e. after the election the player's Magistrate never remains as Dictator. If the player who controls the position of Dictator has no influence tokens in the provinces then he or she moves the Magistrate in the Dictator's Office to the Family estate and no election occurs. If there is no Dictator, then the phase starts with step 2. 2. The Prefect chooses a starting Province Elections will be held in every remaining contested Province. The Prefect must choose a Province in which to start the election. The Prefect takes the gold from the Office of Prefect and his or her pawn and places them on the Province where the electoral circuit will start. 3. Election Starting with the Prefect's chosen Province and proceeding clockwise through the Provinces in the central area, each Province will hold an election. An election is won when one player has an absolute majority of influence in the Province and that majority is at least equal to the value of the Province. A maximum of 1 election is held in a province per turn, so some provinces may hold elections several times in a game before a clear winner emerges. Each influence token present in a province counts 1 vote. Players may also use influences of Office by making one of their active Magistrates from the Offices inactive, adding the influence of that Magistrate to the vote in a single Province. If no player has an absolute majority of influence in the Province then it remains contested until next turn, however the player with the least influence in that province must remove all of his or her influence tokens from that Province. The removed tokens may be distributed among any of the remaining contested Provinces or returned to the Family Estate. Redistribution is done in clockwise order, starting with the player to the Prefect's left. If more than one player is tied for least influence in a Province then the tokens of all tied players are removed from that Province, unless all players are tied, in which case no tokens are removed. The Prefect thus chooses last when redistributing tokens, which can be a significant advantage. Players may not redistribute tokens to Provinces that have already held an election in this phase. Thus the tokens of the losing player/s in the last election of this phase are returned to the Estates. The Prefect's choice of starting Province can thus have a major impact on the outcome of the election phase. If one player has an absolute majority (i.e. more influence when tokens and Magistrate influence is added than all of the other contending players combined) AND has a number of tokens equal to or more than the value of the Province, then that player wins the Province and the tile is moved to the player's Estate. All of the winner's influence tokens are returned to the winner's Estate and the losing player/s may place their influence tokens from that Province in any of the other contested provinces that have not held an election this phase, or return them to their Estates. Note: it is often beneficial to be on the losing side of an election, as your tokens are distributed to other Provinces at no cost. However do not lose sight of the ultimate goal which is to score the highest influence at the end of the game. An example of the start of an election phase follows on the next 2 pages. Example of play in the election phase part way through a game: There is no Dictator, so the phase starts with Susan (playing black) who is the Prefect selecting a starting Province. Susan selects the 4-arms Province, and places the gold and Black pawn from the Prefect space on the province tile. The first election is held in the 4-arms Province. Susan has 5 influence tokens and Paul (playing green) has 4. Paul has no active Magistrates to use to increase influence in the Province, so Susan wins the Province since she has an absolute majority of tokens (5 out of a total of 9) and she has at least 4 tokens in the province. Susan removes the Province with its gold from the electoral circuit and places it in her Family Estate. The 5 black tokens are returned to her Estate. Paul may now place his losing influence tokens in any of the remaining contested provinces, which costs him nothing. He places all 4 green tokens adjacent to the 6-moon province. Susan then moves to the next Province in clockwise order, the 5-crown province, where the next election is held. Quentin, playing blue, has the most influence tokens in the 5-crown province with 4, however it is not an absolute majority since Rebecca (red) and Paul (green) have a combined 6 tokens present. In order to win a province a player must also have at least as many influence tokens present as the value of the province. Regardless, an election is still held in the province. The player(s) with the least amount of influence must redistribute their tokens. Rebecca could decide to use her active Tribune to add 1 influence to level with Quentin, however she feels that redistributing the tokens would be best. Paul has no active magistrates and must now redistribute his tokens. Both Rebecca and Paul decide to move their tokens to the 6-moon province. After redistribution, the 4 Blue tokens will remain next to the 5-crown province and the Prefect pawn will move to the highly contested 6-moon province, where the next election will be held. Following the election, the Prefect will move in turn to the 3-crown, 2-crown and finally the ace-moon province, holding an election in each. The election phase ends once each province in the electoral circuit has held an election. End of turn phase At the end of the turn three housekeeping actions occur. 1. New Provinces If any Provinces have been decided after the election, the Prefect replaces each one with a face down tile. If there are not enough face down tiles to replace the decided provinces, then there is one final round of elections. The Prefect decides which Province will hold an election first. In this final electoral circuit the winner of a Province is the player with the most influence, rather than the majority. If players are tied for most influence then the Province is discarded and not scored, although players may redistribute tokens as for a standard election. After all Provinces have been won or discarded, the game ends, and scoring occurs. 2. Activate Magistrates All Magistrates are made active by turning them so their tick-marks are at 12 o'clock before the start of the next turn. 3. Surrender unused gold Players may not carry any gold in their Estates over to the next turn unless it is on a decided Province all gold is now returned to the bank, and a new Income Phase begins. Winning the game Players calculate their influence totals by adding the value of each Province they have won plus the influence value of each Magistrate they control, regardless of whether the Magistrate is active or inactive. Governors provide influence equal to the provinces they are situated in. The player with the most influence wins. If there is a tie then the player with the most influence in the Offices of Rome wins. If players are still tied, then the player with the highest ranked Magistrate wins. Bribery and player deals Not unlike modern times, Roman politics was fraught with deal making, bribery and backstabbing. In Magistratvm players may negotiate with each other and make deals; of course such deals are never binding. Gold may change hands, but players may not exchange their influence tokens or patricians as part of a deal. Players may, if they wish, use a Magistrate's influence during the election phase to support a rival's influence, but may not transfer influence tokens. Players can, of course, agree not to make deals during the game. *************************************** Designer major contributions: Brad Johnson - idea for Roman Republic setting, research of office titles, idea for bribery, division of influence, streamlining of action round, re-organization of office table, general rules tweaking Phillip Lerche - idea for election game, turn phases, function of offices and prefect, rules editing, general rules tweaking ************************************** Copyright © 2004 by 1, 2. Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license can be found at http://www.gnu.org/licenses/fdl.html. PREFECT DICTATOR CENSOR 6 8 CONSUL 6 4 4 6 6 PRAETOR 3 3 3 4 4 AEDILE 2 2 2 2 2 2 QUAESTOR TRIBUNE 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 FAMILY ESTATES Magistratvm - Summary Sheet Phases of a turn 1. Income phase all players receive gold income 2. Bidding phase players bid for the privilege of the role of Prefect. 3. Action phase starting with the Prefect and moving clockwise, players carry out actions in the Provinces and Offices until all players pass in succession. Available actions: a) place 1 or more influence tokens adjacent to a province b) promote a Patrician c) promote a Magistrate d) appoint a Magistrate as Governor of one of your decided provinces e) take a special Magistrate action f) pass 4. Election phase possible Dictatorial election; the Prefect determines where the electoral circuit will start; an election is held in each contested Province. 5. End of turn phase new provinces placed in the electoral circuit if necessary, all unused gold returned to the bank, all Magistrates made active. Special Magistrate Actions Magistrates must be in the active position in order to take an action, and are made inactive after taking the action. Tribune place one influence token in the Province of your choice at no cost Quaestor take 3 gold during the income phase Aedile move one influence token owned by any player from one contested province to another Praetor return up to 2 influence tokens (belonging to any player) from any single Province to their owner(s) Consul recall one Magistrate (belonging to any player) from Office or one Governor from a Province (You may not recall a Dictator or Censor) Censors have no special function other than the influence they provide. The special function of the Dictator occurs during the election phase.