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Game system

A game system is a group of components that can be used to play multiple games.[1] Games systems can be divided into four major groups, board, card, Dice and low-tech.[1][2][3] Icehouse is a game system that falls outside these groups and is consists of pyramid pieces in different colors.[1][4]

History

Dice date back to prehistory periods with the earliest recovered dice artifact dating to at least 2100 BC as a part of a Backgammon set.[5], but with no record dice until ?./cn/ The next earliest known game system is the deck of playing cards[2] as they were invented in Imperial China.[6] Dominoes also originated from China as a combination of dice and cards.[2]

James Kyle Droscha created the piecepack specifically to make board game system as he could not find a current concept to his to his liking in 2000 and place the concept into the public domain in later in the year.[7] On April 27, 2017, Nefer Games and its owner-game designer Neal Murthy launched a new game system via Kickstarter called Sedis.[8]

Board game systems

Board game systems include Orion, the piecepack, 8x8 game board, Backgammon, Go Set, Chess Variants, Sly & Realm, New Games in Old Rome, Quintillions, Flying Colors & Colormaze, Lemma, Void and GRYB.[9]

  • Kandon game systems: Kadon Enterprises is a board game company that produces a number of game systems including Quintillions, Flying Colors & Colormaze, Lemma and Void.[9]
    • Quintillions is a pentominoes game system designed by Kate Jones inspired by Imperial Earth which has a role for pentominoes. Kandon Enterprises was launched with this system which made the 1995 Games Golden Oldies list and eight times on the Games 100 list. An expansion, Super Quintillions, with nonflat pentominoes was created and a combined set is sold. 70 plus solitaire puzzles and five games' rules come with the system, Quintillions, Quintominoes, Squint, Blockout, and Quint-Mate.[9]
    • Flying Colors & Colormaze: Colormaze was a limited game system that was altered into a more complete system as Flying Colors which moves into the "game construction kit" with a large number of mutators. The mutators can change the small number of games included into a whole new game. The sets contain color titles and a grid board.[9]
    • Lemma designed by Kate Jones is a vinyl board with plenty of transparent colored acrylic disks and comes with rules for classic games, Hounds and Hares, Alquerque; Lemma and two other new games.[9]
    • Void, designed by Michael Waitsman, has a 4x4 board, plus 16 checker-like pieces in two colors with up to 2 [[[Chevron (insignia)|chevrons]] on them. Void, Avoid, Row-of-Four, Null & Void, and Tic-Tac-Void games are in the rulebook.[9]
NGiOR game type period[9]
The Wheel of History The Founding of Rome
The Seven Hills of Rome
Consul The Republic of Rome
Senator king of hill like
Hannibal versus Rome wargames The Ascent of Rome
Proconsul
Caesar The Roman Revolution
Spartacus
Tribunal negotiation game Rhetoric and Law
The Catiline Conspiracy deduction
Imperium The Roman Emperors
The Praetorians
Mercator auction Bread and Circuses
Circus Maximus race games
  • New Games in Old Rome (NGiOR) - was designed by Reiner Knizia published by Piatnik in 1994 Italy with an English language rulebook edition was issued in 1996 by Reaching Moon Megacorp. Old Rome consist of eight different game boards (with one board used in two games), a custom card deck, pawns, counters and money chips. A version of Mercator was later published as the stand alone Medici while The Wheel of History was remade into Tutanchamun. Derek Hohls, of Board Gamesbook website, created six more game for NGiOR called New New Games in Old Rome including Tribunes and Google Box.[9]
  • Orion - is a plastic board with interlocking five-by-five rotor array with boat shape flat pieces and a single die. The rotors are used to move the piece in various directs. This game system was published by Parker Brothers in 1971. Games playable with Orion included Hydra (a Connection game), Draco (a Fox games).[1]
  • Sly & Realm - are two game sets with similar pieces such that it was rumor that one was created from the left over pieces from the other. With such similarities of pieces, they can be treated as one system. Having four sets of Sly will give enough pieces to play the games in the Realm set.[9]
    • Realm was designed by Philip Orbanes and first published in the 1970s by Gamut of Games with the games: Realm, Classic Realm (block opponent's pieces), Medieval Realm (Race game), Oriental Realm (go-like), and Modern Realm (espionage theme displacement game). Realm has a 12 by 12 board divided into 16 fields having a circle in the fields' center cells. Realm was reprint in a limited run by Mik-Lev, Inc.[9]
    • Sly, or Blockade, was designed by Sid Sackson and first released in 1975. When released again as Blockade in 1979 it was nominated for the Spiel des Jahres. Its board is 12x12 board with the center cell market with a circle and split into 16 3x3 "fields". The the pieces are in four different color set with a set having six square, four triangular and one cylindrical piece. Sly was published with a six game rulebook: Solitaire Sly (similar to Peg solitaire), Sniggle (two-dimensional Race game), Line Up (Tic-tac-toe]] but 4 in a row), Blockade, Empire (4 player chess variant), and Gateway (sci-fi themed "tempo" game).[9]
  • Sedis is a set of 60 hex title with five spaces that may be filled (pips) or empty (blanks). The side with three pips is called the primary side. There are 10 families which consist of those of the same combination of pips on the primary side.[8] The first designed game was Honeycomb, an arrangement game, created by Neal Murthy's niece.[10]

Piecepack

piecepack
DesignersJames Kyle Droscha
Years active2000-present
GenresBoard game
Playersvaries

The piecepack is a board game system consisting of 24 titles, 24 coins, 4 pawns and 4 diced split into 4 suits: Suns (red), Moons (black), Crowns (green or yellow), and Arms (blue, and typically represented by a Fleur de Lis). Dice, titles and coins are numbered null, ace, two, three, four and five. Titles have four spaces on one side and the suit & number on the other. On the reverse of the coins is the suit while a directional marker joins the value on the other side. Pawns and dice are in the color of the suits. The system was place in the public domain.[1]

For a while regular game design contests were held by the piecepack community. The contest was themed and judged by the winner of the previous contest.[7]

PP history

Closed Design Contests Entries Winner Winning Game[11]
March 2002 Time Marches On
(time based)
5 Kidsprout Jumboree Ron and
Marty Hale-Evans
2002 Ludic Synergy
(combine with another
game system)
7 Alien City Michael Schoessow
January 2003 Changing Landscapes 16 New City Rob LeGood
July 2003 History Repeats Itself 5 Pharaoh's Heir Phillip Lerche
December 2003 Solitary Confinement 18 Piece Packing Pirates Clark Rodeffer
June 2004 Group Projects 15 The "In" Crowd Jeb Havens and
Ian Schreiber

James Kyle Droscha, HellRail game creator, created the piecepack after liking the appeal of board game system concept but not finding one, including Icehouse, to his liking in 2000. Droscha used playing cards a model taking the suits concept. Square titles were chosen to make the new system flexible, portable and easy to make. To have it as widely available as the playing cards, Droscha place the concept into the public domain in late 2000.[7]

The piecepack design contest was held by Droscha in March 2002, won by Ron and Marty Hale-Evans with KidSprout Jumboree game. By June 2002, two expansion were released for the system, piecepack pyramids and piecepackplus, and Mesomorph Games became the first commercial manufacturer of piecepack. The Hale-Evans then launched the next competition in mid-2002 with the theme of combine with another game system.[9] By March 2004, JCD piecepack, an additional variant, was published created by Jonathan Dietrich.[12]

Expansions

  • 4 Seasons - Mesomorph Games expansion which is the piecepack set but uses suits for the four seasons[7]
  • Playing Cards Expansion - Mesomorph Games expansion which is the piecepack set but uses the basic playing card suits[7]
  • piecepack pyramids - created by Tim Schutz of tjgames[9]
  • piecepackplus (pp+) - created by Derek Hohls, of Board Gamesbook website, which is a specification revision in addition to being an expansion by adding other types of component. The specification revision is a change to suit symbols.[9]
  • JCD Printable Piecepack - created by Jonathan Dietrich like the pp+ changes the specification by going to a black and white design with eight suits either light or dark, replacing arms/Fleur de Lis with an anchor and adding the card suits (red are light and black are dark). It was design this way for the color blind and for black and white printers. The anchor substitution was to allow the set to work with the six suited Empire playing cards. The variant adds another die, pawn belt and dark-light star-coin per suit plus 2 suit dice (null, ace, plus four suits).[12]

Card game systems

Card game systems is a whole group of game systems that are variations of the Playing cards. This set can be categorized into the subsets of traditional card decks, multi-suited decks, imaginary & semi-imaginary decks, miscellaneous decks, alphabet decks, and novel card game system.[2]

Multi-suited decks

Multi-suited decks are usual a deck with one or two additional suits added to a standard deck of cards.[2] Early five suited sets include the Minchiate and Tarrocco, which both has a trump suit and added another face card (by keeping the knight and adding the now standard queen) to the regular suits like Tarot.[sd 1] An all original 5 suited deck was found to have printed as early as 1470 in Cologne by Martin Schoen with the suits of Hares, Parrots, Pinks, Roses, and Columbines and having four face cards per suit like the Minchiate.[sd 2] A supposedly 25 card 5 suit set was used to play a predecessor game called “As Nas” in 16th-century Persia.[sd 3] Two additional suited sets arrived in 1938 with a green Eagle suit in the US and in England with a blue Royals suit indicated by a crown, both of which were used to play a Contract bridge variant.[sd 4] The Sextet published by Secobra in 1964 and 1986 consisted of six suits added two blue suits, Wheels and Rackets. The Cinco-Loco set printed by the now defunct USA Playing Card Company (not to be confused with the active United States Playing Card Company) goes to a four color suits plus the Cincos suit with a complex suit symbol that includes the 4 French suits. In current usage is the Stardeck which adds the additional suit of a black & red star.[2]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Hale-Evans, Ron (December 2001). "Game Systems - Part 1". The Games Journal. Retrieved March 5, 2015.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Hale-Evans, Ron (February 2002). "Game Systems - Part 2: Card Game Systems". The Games Journal. Retrieved March 5, 2015.
  3. ^ Hale-Evans, Ron (February 2002). "Game Systems - Part 4: Low-Tech Game Systems". The Games Journal. Retrieved March 5, 2015.
  4. ^ Liu, Jonathan H. (January 3, 2013). "Looney Pyramids Are Back". Wired. Condé Nast. Geek Dad. Archived from the original on January 3, 2013. Retrieved June 8, 2015.
  5. ^ "Burnt City, key to lost civilization". presstv.ir. April 11, 2007. Archived from the original on June 20, 2007. Retrieved 2012-06-18.
  6. ^ Wilkinson, W.H. (1895). "Chinese Origin of Playing Cards". American Anthropologist. VIII (1): 61–78. doi:10.1525/aa.1895.8.1.02a00070. S2CID 162255997.
  7. ^ a b c d e Martin, W. Eric (July 2004). "You Want a Piece of This?". GAMES Magazine. Retrieved March 5, 2015.
  8. ^ a b Bristol, Rory (May 5, 2017). "Kickstarter Alert: 'Sedis' Universal Gaming System". GeekDad. Retrieved May 23, 2017.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Hale-Evans, Ron (February 2002). "Game Systems - Part 3: Board Game Systems". The Games Journal. Retrieved March 5, 2015.
  10. ^ Nielsen, Sarah Rufca (April 27, 2017). "Did This Houstonian Just Reinvent the Board Game?". Houstonia. Houston, Texas: SagaCity Media. Retrieved May 23, 2017.
  11. ^ "Design Contests". Piecepack.org. Mesomorph Games. Retrieved November 4, 2015.
  12. ^ a b "JCD Printable Piecepack". piecepack.org. Mesomorph Games. March 1, 2004. Retrieved March 14, 2016.
  1. ^ Baretti, Joseph (1768). "XXXIII". ACCOUNT OF THE MANNERS AND CUSTOMS OF ITALY VOL. II. London: T. Davies. p. 217.
  2. ^ Singer, Samuel Weller; Triphook, Robert (1816). "Appendix No. 9". Researches into the History of Playing Cards and Printing. London: Robert Triphook.
  3. ^ Kotar, S. L.; Gessler, J. E. (2009). The Steamboat Era: a History of Fulton's Folly on American Rivers, 1807-1860. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Co.
  4. ^ Morehead, Albert H. (1944). The Pocket Book of Games: 150 Most Popular Card Games, Dice Games, Word Games, Party Games, Board Games, Gambling Games. New York, NY: Pocket Books, Inc.
Game system
([[|BoardGameGeek|BGG]] link)
Link Other link
Chess The Chess Variant Pages
New Games in Old Rome New NGiOR
Orion unofficial website at The Center for Ludic Synergy
piecepack piecepack.org community website piecepackplus
(specification revision & expansion)
Sly & Realm Realm at Nestor Games

Flint water crisis

Water loss

An initial report in December 2011 estimated that Flint city's water system was leaking 30 to 40%, this more than the accepted 15 to 20% loss. Emergency manager Michael Brown started in February 2012 an audit of the water system to determine the difference between the amount of water sold and the amount of water leaving the water plant.[1]

Water theft investigations

On June 23, 2014, Emergency manager Darnell Earley hired a retired Flint Police Department lieutenant Marcus Mahan as an investigator reporting to the EM for an unspecified special investigation.[2] Mahan was deputized by the Genesee County Sheriff's Office after an amendment to an agreement between the city and county was resolved in July 2014. Being deputized by the Sheriff, lasting until April 2015, was expected to give him independence and avoid claims of conflict of interest. What specifically he was investigation was still under wraps as to not tip off the investigated.[3]

With the filing of six court cases in September 2015 with Mahan as the lead detective, his area of investigation was revealed to be water theft.[4] Warren Southall II, a Flint City employee, was arraigned on Sunday, September 14 on one count of malicious destruction of utility property in Flint District Court.[5] The charge was for illegally turning on a Flint home's water service. Three other cases were for a count of fraudulent use of a public utility under $500; two plead guilt. The final case is Simeon King, 49, charged with one count of resisting and obstructing police officers.[4]

Darnell EarleyMichael Brown (Michigan politician)Karegnondi Water AuthorityGreat Lakes Water AuthorityDetroit Water and Sewerage Department

Flint Now

On February 23, 2016, FlintNow, Tom Gore formed professional basketball campaign for Flint, announced Hall of Fame basketball player Magic Johnson was joining that effort by funding educational program even possibly a scholarship like he set up in Lansing.[6]

References

  1. ^ Longley, Kristin (February 15, 2012). "Flint is auditing water system following reports of major leaks". Flint Journal. Mlive Media Group. Retrieved February 23, 2016.
  2. ^ Fonger, Ron (July 16, 2014). "Retired police lieutenant appointed special investigator for Flint emergency manager". Flint Journal. MLive Media Group. Retrieved February 8, 2016.
  3. ^ Thorne, Blake (July 25, 2014). "Retired Flint police lieutenant to be deputized by sheriff for city of Flint's internal investigation". Flint Journal. Mlive Media Group. Retrieved February 8, 2016.
  4. ^ a b Young, Molly (September 17, 2014). "Special investigator hired by Flint emergency manager is lead detective in half-dozen water theft cases". Flint Journal. MLive Media Group. Retrieved February 8, 2016.
  5. ^ Young, Molly (September 15, 2014). "Flint city employee arraigned on charge related to residential water theft". Flint Journal. MLive Media Group. Retrieved February 8, 2016.
  6. ^ "Magic Johnson joins effort to help Flint amid water crisis". ABC12.com. WJRT. February 23, 2016. Retrieved February 23, 2016.