Beschrijving
Min leeftijd: +14
Aantal spelers 2
Gem speelduur 120 a 240 min
In 1697 kwam de Zonnekoning, Lodewijk XIV, uit een decennium van oorlog tevoorschijn, terwijl zijn continentale ambities nog steeds niet bevredigd waren. Ondertussen zat koning Willem III van Engeland gemakkelijker op zijn nieuwe troon dan ooit tevoren. Nu de Spaanse opvolgingscrisis onopgelost en dreigend was, bestond er geen illusie dat de nieuwe eeuw een rustige eeuw zou worden. Maar noch Frankrijk, noch Engeland hadden het tumult van de komende jaren kunnen voorzien: een Tweede Honderdjarige Oorlog, waarin deze twee hardnekkige tegenstanders hevig en trots zouden strijden langs elke as van menselijke prestaties. Op slagvelden van India tot Canada en de Caribische Zee zouden hun legers en vloten botsen; in de salons van Parijs en de koffiehuizen van Londen zouden de politiek en de economie van de moderne wereld geboren worden; en uiteindelijk zou een revolutie de fundamenten van de samenleving op zijn grondvesten doen schudden – een revolutie die niet in bloed en terreur had kunnen eindigen, maar in een triomf van democratie en vrijheid die de wereld onvoorstelbaar zou hebben getransformeerd.
Imperial Struggle is een spel voor twee spelers dat de 18e-eeuwse rivaliteit tussen Frankrijk en Groot-Brittannië uitbeeldt. Het begint in 1697, terwijl de twee rijken behoedzaam wachten tot de koning van Spanje een erfgenaam aanwijst, en eindigt in 1789, toen een nieuwe orde de Bastille ten val bracht. Het spel gaat niet alleen maar over oorlog: zowel Frankrijk als Groot-Brittannië moeten de fundamenten leggen voor de koloniale rijkdom, omgaan met de andere landen van Europa en strijden om glorie gedurende de hele menselijke inspanning.
Imperial Struggle beslaat bijna 100 jaar geschiedenis en vier grote oorlogen. Toch blijft het een laag-complexiteitsspel, speelbaar in een korte avond. Het doel is om zijn spirituele voorvader, Twilight Struggle, te eren door verder te gaan in de richting van eenvoudige regels en speelbare systemen, terwijl de mondiale reikwijdte en historische reikwijdte binnen de reikwijdte van één avond behouden blijven. In vredesbeurten bouwen spelers hun economische belangen en allianties op en profiteren ze van historische gebeurtenissen die worden weergegeven door gebeurteniskaarten. Ze moeten hun investeringen verstandig kiezen, maar ook met het oog om deze kansen aan hun tegenstander te ontzeggen. In oorlogssituaties kan elk theater grote beloningen opleveren in de vorm van verovering en prestige, maar terreinwinst kan aan de verdragstafel verdwijnen. Zullen de Britten aan het einde van deze eeuw een imperium regeren waar de zon nooit ondergaat? Of zal Frankrijk de weg voor de wereld verlichten, als de supermacht uit de dromen van de Zonnekoning of als de republiek van Lafayette?
Imperial Struggle: The Second Hundred Years’ War, 1697-1789
“What I gained by being in France was learning to be better satisfied with my own country.” – Samuel Johnson
“England has forty-two religions and only two sauces.” – Voltaire
In 1697 the Sun King, Louis XIV, emerged from a decade of war with his Continental ambitions still unsatisfied. Meanwhile, King William III of England sat easier on his new throne than he ever had before. With the Spanish succession crisis unresolved and looming, there were no illusions that the new century would be a quiet one. But neither France nor England could have anticipated the tumult of the years to come: a Second Hundred Years’ War, during which these two tenacious adversaries would compete fiercely and proudly along every axis of human achievement. On battlefields from India to Canada to the Caribbean Sea their armies and fleets would clash; in the salons of Paris and the coffee-houses of London the modern world’s politics and economics would be born; and finally a revolution would rock the foundations of society – a revolution that could have ended not in blood and terror but in a triumph of democracy and liberty that might have transformed the world beyond imagining.
Imperial Struggle is a two-player game depicting the 18th-century rivalry between France and Britain. It begins in 1697, as the two realms wait warily for the King of Spain to name an heir, and ends in 1789, when a new order brought down the Bastille. The game is not merely about war: both France and Britain must build the foundations of colonial wealth, deal with the other nations of Europe, and compete for glory across the span of human endeavor.
Imperial Struggle covers almost 100 years of history and four major wars. Yet it remains a quick-playing, low-complexity game. It aims to honor its spiritual ancestor, Twilight Struggle, by pushing further in the direction of simple rules and playable systems, while maintaining global scope and historical sweep in the scope of a single evening. In peace turns, players build their economic interests and alliances, and take advantage of historical events represented by Event cards. They must choose their investments wisely, but also with an eye to denying these opportunities to their opponent. In war turns, each theater can bring great rewards of conquest and prestige… but territorial gains can disappear at the treaty table. At the end of the century, will the British rule an empire on which the sun never sets? Or will France light the way for the world, as the superpower of the Sun King’s dreams or the republic of Lafayette’s?
Gameplay
Imperial Struggle is a game about what historians call the “Second Hundred Years’ War.” It tries to capture the whole span of this global 18th-century rivalry between Britain and France. From the beginning of the game, the stakes couldn’t be higher: in the War of the Spanish Succession, France fights to become the world’s first global superpower by uniting its peerless army with Spain’s colonial wealth… all the way to the end, where the British struggle to maintain control over the vast North American territories.
There are two types of turns in Imperial Struggle: peace turns and war turns. Each peace turn, an array of Investment Tiles is laid out: each tile represents a diplomatic, military, or economic opportunity your government can exploit. Each tile shows the action points you’ll be able to spend when you choose it – but be careful – if there’s only one Diplomatic tile on view, it may be worth denying it to your opponent rather than taking an Economic or Military tile with a higher action point value. With Economic action points you’ll extend and develop your control over trade in essential commodities: furs, sugar, cotton, and spices; with Diplomatic ones, you’ll negotiate understandings with other European countries and native groups; and with Military points you’ll decide the extent of your military preparations for the inevitable wars to come and fortify your colonial holdings against unrest. With all three, you’ll have the chance to take the lead from your opponent in areas of competition like taxation, industry, and scholarship. And, like your historical counterparts, you’ll have to keep a close eye on the massive debt that can accumulate as a result of your ambitions.
You’ll also hold Event cards which can be used for a minor benefit regardless of your board position, but which can yield much larger gains if you’ve planned ahead for them. Event cards can only be played alongside an investment tile of matching type. Taking a leaf from Volko Ruhnke’s COIN system, most Events have two versions: pro-French and pro-British. Thus events that went one way historically can break to the other side’s advantage in any given game.
During war turns you compare your carefully assembled military strength in each of the war’s theaters to your opponent’s. This strength comes not just from troops but from alliances, naval superiority, and espionage. Only during wars can you take territory from your opponent, so they present a unique opportunity to strengthen your nation. Each of the major wars of the period is individually represented. The stakes in each theater and war vary as they did historically, and legendary historical figures like the Duke of Marlborough or the Marquis de Lafayette can leave their mark on the game as they did in history.
Imperial Struggle is a low-complexity game that can be finished by experienced players in a short evening. It is not a card-driven game in the sense that cards do not determine the entire scope of player actions each turn; rather, players must combine the Investment Tiles, accessible to each of them, with the Events, which are secretly held. Additionally, Imperial Struggle has no die rolling. The randomness in the game comes from three sources: the Investment Tile deal each peace turn, the initial military strength in each theater of war, and each player’s Event draws.
As France, will you forge a French Raj and dominate eastern trade? As Britain, will you retain control of the American colonies? Will the French Revolution fulfill its promise as the ultimate realization of the Enlightenment, eclipsing the American one in importance and impact? Will Britain dominate trade and industry on the sails of the Royal Navy? How will your Imperial Struggle unfold?