Talk:Par-Trees-i: Difference between revisions
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While there is no bar to a three-person game of Par-Trees-i, in a three-player game, the player with nobody sitting immediately clockwise of him has an advantage in that his pieces, having the larger gap behind them, are less likely to be hit. If someone can think of some sort of compensation for this, it could become a three-player game as well. -- [[User:FreeTrav|FreeTrav]] 19:35, 5 Mar 2006 (GMT) |
While there is no bar to a three-person game of Par-Trees-i, in a three-player game, the player with nobody sitting immediately clockwise of him has an advantage in that his pieces, having the larger gap behind them, are less likely to be hit. If someone can think of some sort of compensation for this, it could become a three-player game as well. -- [[User:FreeTrav|FreeTrav]] 19:35, 5 Mar 2006 (GMT) |
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The image of the board is missing, but a different version of the game rules describes the board without a picture; see the [https://web.archive.org/web/20061011122825/https://icehousegames.org/wiki/?title=Par-Trees-i Wayback Machine].--[[User:MCDeMarco|MCDeMarco]] ([[User talk:MCDeMarco|talk]]) 03:02, 15 May 2024 (UTC) |
Latest revision as of 03:02, 15 May 2024
While there is no bar to a three-person game of Par-Trees-i, in a three-player game, the player with nobody sitting immediately clockwise of him has an advantage in that his pieces, having the larger gap behind them, are less likely to be hit. If someone can think of some sort of compensation for this, it could become a three-player game as well. -- FreeTrav 19:35, 5 Mar 2006 (GMT)
The image of the board is missing, but a different version of the game rules describes the board without a picture; see the Wayback Machine.--MCDeMarco (talk) 03:02, 15 May 2024 (UTC)