Conspirateurs

Conspirateurs
Years active Late 18th century to present
Genre(s) Board game, Abstract strategy game
Players 2
Setup time 0 seconds
Random chance None
Skill(s) required Tactics, strategy

Conspirateurs (or the English spelling Conspirators) is a two-player abstract strategy board game from France. It was invented sometime in the 18th century. The game resembles Halma, Chinese Checkers, and Salta as players hop over friendly or enemy pieces to get to their destination.

There are two phases to the game: a drop phase where players place their men onto the board, and a move phase where players race their men to perimeter destinations.

Conspirateurs probably dates from the French Revolutionary Wars—"a period of feverish political activity with factions conspiring against each other".[1]

Contents

Equipment

Game rules

The board begins empty. Players choose color, and which player has the first turn. Play alternates after each turn.

  1. Drop phase: Players first place one man per turn on any vacant intersection point on the special 9×5 center area of the board. Players cannot move a man until all of their 20 men have been placed.
  2. Move phase: Players may move one of their men to a vacant point one step in any direction (horizontally, vertically, or diagonally). Or players may jump over an adjacent man (friend or foe) and land onto a vacant point immediately beyond.
A jumped man is not captured (there are no captures in Conspirateurs). Multiple jumps are allowed: A man can continue to jump as long as there are jumps to be made, and can stop jumping at any point (jumps are never compulsory).
Goal

Players attempt to race their 20 men from the "secret meeting place" into the 39 shelters on the edge of the board (a shelter may hold at most one man). The first to accomplish that feat wins the game. (A drawn result is not possible in Conspirateurs, since a total of 40 men and 39 shelters will always leave one unfortunate man without a shelter.)

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Bell (1983), p. 129

References

External links