Bohnaparte

Nov. 27th, 2003 01:39 am
avram: (Default)
[personal profile] avram
Went in for comics today, only thing I got was New X-Men #149 (part four of the “Planet X” arc). Have I mentioned how very much I like the new student characters Morrison has introduced over the course of his run on the title?

I stopped in at the uptown branch of Pearl Paint first, to get more pens. My old Pitt S fineline was drying out, and my black Pitt brushpen has a frayed tip. I was also intending to get some gray Tria markers, but the uptown Pearl doesn’t seem to carry those.

Met [livejournal.com profile] bugsybanana, [livejournal.com profile] womzilla, and [livejournal.com profile] drcpunk at Cosmic. (Man, having an LJ client that auto-formats user tags kicks ass.) We went out for Indian food (and were joined by [livejournal.com profile] mnemex), then headed over to Neutral Ground to get some boardgaming in. Bugsy played her first game of Puerto Rico.

Then we played Bohnaparte, a very odd and hard-to-find expansion for Bohnanza that turns it into a wargame. Seriously. You play a regular game of Bohnanza (though everyone starts out with a third beanfield), and there’s a board of cards (representing territories) in the middle of the table. As you accumulate money, you can spend it to launch attacks on neighboring territories, using bean cards out of your hand to indicate attack strength. I won, narrowly beating out Womzilla; Bugsy and Mnemex were handicapped by unlucky draws early in the game that quashed their first few attacks. One odd quirk: The number on the card, the one indicating frequency, is used for attack strength, so the most powerful cards (the blue beans, of which there are 20) are the most common. Strategic tip, in the unlikely event you find yourself playing: Get a munitions depot early in the game, and dump blue beans and chili beans into it.

(no subject)

Date: 2003-11-30 04:24 pm (UTC)
mneme: (Default)
From: [personal profile] mneme
It may be rough, like any odds determinant....but in this case, it should be pretty useful.

The thing is, while what comes out of the draw pile is a closed deal, what goes into it is always open. This means that you can calculate the important odds in the second and third draw (ie, those of any given drawn card being a 20, or even an 18) with a high degree of precision if you just keep track of those three numbers and how many cards are reshuffled to begin with.

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