Table feel
Hoplite has a high level of direct confrontation and strategic depth in confrontation. Players need to frequently pay attention to and react to each other's strategies. However, there is a lower emphasis on cooperation in the game.
Hoplite, the 15th volume in the Great Battles of History series of games, allows players to recreate classic battles from the pre-Alexandrian Persian-Hellenistic Age, the heyday of the Hoplite (heavy infantry fighting in packed formation). This period is often considered to featu...
Players
1-4
Time
60-480
Age
13+
Weight
3.48
Rating
7.74
Should this hit the table?
Hoplite has a high level of direct confrontation and strategic depth in confrontation. Players need to frequently pay attention to and react to each other's strategies. However, there is a lower emphasis on cooperation in the game.
Teaching signal
High replayability
Highly interactive
Scales well
Deep strategy
More strategic control
Hoplite has a high level of direct confrontation and strategic depth in confrontation. Players need to frequently pay attention to and react to each other's strategies. However, there is a lower emphasis on cooperation in the game.
Hoplite offers a high level of variability with its gameboard, allowing for different experiences each time it is played. The presence of expansions adds to the replay value, although their impact may not be as significant. The game provides deep strategic possibilities, allowing players to continually improve their tactics and strategies. The player interaction score is average. Hoplite scales well with different numbers of players, maintaining its appeal and balance. The game is moderately easy to learn, offering a balance between accessibility and depth. Overall, Hoplite has a strong replayability score of 7.93.
Hoplite has a moderate level of luck involved in the game. Random elements, such as dice rolls or card draws, have a notable but not exclusive impact on the game outcome. However, players have substantial ability to mitigate the effects of randomness through strategic decisions and planning. The game outcome is primarily determined by player strategy and decisions, with luck playing a minor role. Overall, Hoplite strikes a good balance between luck and strategy, making it an engaging and skill-based board game.
Overview
Hoplite, the 15th volume in the Great Battles of History series of games, allows players to recreate classic battles from the pre-Alexandrian Persian-Hellenistic Age, the heyday of the Hoplite (heavy infantry fighting in packed formation). This period is often considered to feature the birth of Western Warfare, as opposed to the Persian/Eastern style, which relied on archery , light cavalry, and mobility. Exactly how hoplite warfare was fought – what really happened when “the bell rang” – is highly disputed by ancient military historians, even today. Hoplite allows you to test out your theories (well, our theories, using your dice) with eleven of the great battles of this era, from the Battle of Leuctra, featuring the huge 60-man deep phalanx of Beotarch Epaminondas to the classic confrontations with the Persian missile-armed troops against the classic Greek hoplite phalanxes. Hoplite uses detailed mechanics meant to convey all the possibilities of this style of warfare, from The Hellenic Law of Inertia, to Drift to the Right, to the special capabilities of the Persian Light Cavalry (Harassment and Dispersal) to three different levels of Hoplite advance to Combat (the Run Don’t Walk rules) and a whole lot more. We even still have some good old chariots! And you get to fight what was the biggest land battle in European history up until Napoleonic times, the immense Battle of Plataea (truly the deciding engagement of the Greco-Persian Wars): two maps and about 250 combat counters covering The Greek Contingents from 26 City-States under Pausanias, Spartan Regent and General, vs. The Persians, Medes, Asians (Bactrians, Scythians, Indians and a whole lot of others) and seven Medized Greek city-states, under Mardonius, Persian Commander and son-in-law of The Great King, Darius I. The package includes Simple GBoH versions for each of the battles along with special rules that highlight the hoplite style of warfare. Hoplite is the ultimate board game simulation on the birth of Western Warfare. And it lets you see how we stack up with the latest (June 2013) book on the subject: Men of Bronze: Hoplite Warfare in Ancient Greece, Donald Kagan (Editor), Gregory F. Viggiano (Editor) Components: 3 22 x 34" back printed maps 4 Counter Sheets (1,120 1/2" counters) 1 Rules Book 1 Scenario Book 2 player aid folio cards (standard rules) 1 player aid card (Simple GBoH rules) 1 ten-sided die plastic counter storage bags Game scale: 100 yards per hex Players: 1 to 4 – Plataea (no solo rules; Plataea could hold up to nine actually) Playing Time: 1 ½ to 8 hours Battles: Cunaxa - Persians vs. Rebels, 401 BCE Delium - Athenians vs. Boeotians, 424 BCE Ephesus - Ionians and Allies vs Persians, 498 BCE Leuctra - Boeotian League vs Sparta and Allies, 371 BCE Mantinea - Arcadian and Boeotian Leagues vs Sparta and Lacedaemonian Allies, 362 BCE Marathon - Persia vs. Athens and Plataea, 490 BCE Mycale - Greeks vs Persians, 479 BCE Plataea - Greeks vs Persians, 479 BCE Nemea - Spartans and Allies vs Thebans and Allies, 394 BCE Coronea - Spartans and Allies vs Thebans and Allies, 394 BCE Tanagra- Athenians vs Spartans, 457 BCE
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