I was recently asked to help design the Artificial Intelligence (AI) algorithm for an iOS app based on a boardgame with which I am familiar.
[I admit to a pet peeve regarding the use of the term "AI" to represent algorithm-driven characters and players in computer games. I consider Artificial Intelligence to be much more sophisticated than simple state-driven rule sets. Few if any computer and video games are truly artificially intelligent. But that's okay. I accept the terminology for what it is - adulteration of the English language. There. I've said it. Now I can let it go.]
Ridere, ludere, hoc est vivere.
Saturday, September 1, 2012
Tuesday, August 28, 2012
Worker placement gold standard - another Agricola session
It seems that I can never talk about worker-placement games without comparing them to Agricola (designer Uwe Rosenberg, artist Klemens Franz, publisher Z-Man), which I guess was my first introduction to the genre and the one nearest to my gaming heart. It has become the standard against which I measure all other worker-placement games. Tonight, Kathy and I decided to drag it to the table again, and this old favorite still satisfies as much as it ever did.
Sunday, August 26, 2012
Worker placement - comparison and contrast
My wife Kathy and I have played two worker-placement games in the past three days, and we've come to form very different opinions about the two of them.
Friday we played Belfort (designers Bamboozle Brothers Jay Cormier and Sen-Foong Lim, artist Joshua Cappel, publisher Tasty Minstrel), which I'd put high on my wishlist based on a number of strong recommendations. The appeal of Belfort is clear - it combines a number of Euro-game elements in a rather interesting format. DiceHateMe Games called it the Game of the Year for 2011. There is some area control going on, resource optimization, construction - all the things you expect in a Euro game these days.
(c) Tasty Minstrel Games Used by permission |
Friday, August 24, 2012
American battleships at Midway
Wednesday afternoon, my friend and colleague Frank H. and I got together after work for our re-match in Midway (designers Larry Pinsky and Lindsley Schutz, publisher Avalon Hill). We first clashed over the Pacific in June, when I played the Americans and Frank the Japanese. This time, we switched roles, so that I commanded the forces of the Imperial Japanese Navy and Frank those of the United States Navy.
Sunday, August 19, 2012
Lemming luncheon
My wife Kathy, my eleven-year-old son, and I inaugurated one of my WBC acquisitions this evening -- the light-hearted Leaping Lemmings (designers John Poniske and Rick Young, artists Rodger MacGowan, Leona Preston, and Mark Simonitch, publisher GMT). This fox-and-geese variation is actually a symmetric game, in which each player has a faction of lemmings seeking to evade the eagles, whose control rotates among the players.
Saturday, August 18, 2012
The game time conundrum
This isn't a new problem, but it's a problem that has recently really come sharply into focus. I've been playing plenty of two-player games at home, and several multi-player Euros with friends. But a number of other games and genres have caught my attention on which I'd like to spend more time and energy:
Friday, August 17, 2012
WBC: Acquire and acquisitions
Early in our game of Acquire. I had a majority holding in Worldwide (the purple hotel to the right), but that wasn't enough to prevail |
Tuesday, August 14, 2012
WBC: Designers' forum
One of the great things about a convention like the World Boardgaming Championships is having the opportunity to interact with fellow designers. The open gaming room at WBC was practically an informal design laboratory of demonstrations and playtesting.
My friend Keith F. and I had only the briefest chat with one of my favorite designers, T.C. Petty III, whom I met at WBC last year when he was demonstrating the semi-cooperative Viva Java, a game that has already seen its successful Kickstarter campaign and has a Dice Hate Me release expected this month. T.C. is working on a couple of ideas that sound characteristically original and off-beat. It will be fun to see what creations find their way to production out of his unique perspective on game design.
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TC Petty III's Viva Java Image courtesy of Dice Hate Me Games |
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