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Implo
Implo
by (Web published) (2020)
Player Count
2

Player Ages
5+

Playing Time
20 minutes to 1 hour
Categories
  • Abstract Strategy
  • Territory Building
  • Designers
  • Luis BolaƱos Mures
  • Mechanisms
  • Tile Placement
  • Area Enclosure
  • Pattern Recognition
  • Area Control / Area Influence
  • Square Grid
  • Chaining
  • Family
  • Combinatorial
  • Player Count: Two Player Only Games
  • Digital Implementations: Ai Ai
  • Rating: 8/10 from 2 users

    Description

    Introduction

    Implo is a finite territory game for two players: Black and White. It is played on the intersections (points) of an initially empty square board. The recommended board sizes are between 6x6 and 10x10. Each player must have access to a sufficient number of stones and markers of their own color.

    Definitions

    In these rules, "adjacent" always means "orthogonally adjacent".

    A group is a piece along with all other pieces one could reach from it through a series of steps between identical adjacent pieces. Thus, all pieces in a group are the same type (stone or marker) and color (black or white).

    The size of a group is the number of pieces in it.

    Likewise, a territory is an empty point along with all other points one could reach from it through a series of steps between adjacent empty points.

    A patch is a territory including at most four points.

    The owner of a patch is the player with the biggest group of stones adjacent to it. If there is no such group or the biggest such groups of both colors are the same size, the owner of the patch is the opponent of the player who placed the last stone on the board.

    To resolve a patch is to place a marker of its owner's color on each of its points and to remove the biggest group of stones which is adjacent to the patch and owned by the same player as the patch. If several such groups are tied for biggest, the player who is resolving the patch removes, among those, one of their choosing. If there are no groups of stones adjacent to the patch, no group is removed. Note the player resolving the patch need not be the owner of the patch.

    Play

    Black plays first, then turns alternate. On your turn, perform these actions in order:

    1. Place a stone of your color on an empty point of the board.

    2. Resolve any single patch on the board.

    3. Repeat the previous step until no patches remain. Note the order of resolving matters, and resolving a patch may create new patches.

    If, at the end of a player's turn, there are no empty points on the board, the game ends. The winner is the player with more groups of markers of the largest size of which there is an unequal number of black and white groups of markers. If there is a tie, whoever has more stones on the board wins. If this is also tied (only possible on even-sized boards), whoever made the last move loses.

    Pie rule

    The pie rule is used in order to make the game fair. This means White will have the option, on their first turn only, to swap sides with their opponent instead of making a regular move.

    Game Discussions

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