Pan am game coverage


















The second bomb cyclone in a week could bring heavy snow and high winds to Atlantic Canada through Saturday. Klay Thompson had a very Klay-like reaction to not getting the ball on an open-look in transition. It looks like another storm, on Friday, will mostly miss this region.

The conservative TV personality showed she could use a reality check on "The Five. Kate Middleton had a private video call with Meghan Markle and Prince Harry on her 40th birthday and a source is spilling details.

After Inskeep told the ex-president that his fraud claims have repeatedly been proven false, the reporter a. Close this content. Read full article. For only the second time in its history, The Royal Agricultural Winter Fair has been cancelled but plans are being made for some virtual competitions. Government Financial Assistance for Ontario Farmers. Ontario Equestrian has recently released this update of several financial assistance packages available, including those for farm business.

News , Industry. News , Industry , Equine Welfare. Pseudonyms will no longer be permitted. By submitting a comment, you accept that CBC has the right to reproduce and publish that comment in whole or in part, in any manner CBC chooses. Please note that CBC does not endorse the opinions expressed in comments. Airports are placed, Destination cards added, and Planes acquired. The route must have been unclaimed and the player keeps that route for the rest of the game unless it is sold to Pan Am.

The player then increases their income by the length of the route. Then, the next player with an Engineer in the area claims a route, and so on. Pan Am Phase — This consists of three steps. First, Pan Am a non-player airline controlled by the game expands. Remember that each event card has a third area? If the route is claimed by a player, they must sell, but the money the bank gives them for it is sufficiently large that this is almost always a welcome development. In the second step, the players receive their income from the bank.

Finally, they can buy as many shares of Pan Am stock as they wish, based on the current share price of the stock. The share price can bounce around a bit, but it tends to rise over the course of the game, so the tension here is wanting to buy as many shares as possible at a lower price, while still maintaining enough funds to conduct your actions next round.

The Directive cards give some nice benefits. Each card indicates exactly when it can be played this is a nice touch, removing any possible confusion about how these can be played and the owning player can play them at any appropriate time. After 7 rounds, the game ends. The player with the most shares of Pan Am stock wins. Larry Levy : My first game of this was with 2 players.

Figuring out how to employ your Engineers leads to some nice decision making. Airports, Destination cards, and additional Planes all have their uses.

At the heart of all these decisions is whether you should use your cash to win crucial bids or keep it for buying stock that turn, since the stock price is likely to rise in future turns. I like the take on worker placement here. The goal of acquiring the most shares of stock may seem a little strange, but it does fit the theme the game is called Pan Am, after all and serves multiple functions over the course of the game. And it gives the players a nice puzzle of how to balance share purchases and operating capital.

The way it actually works does provide for some variety, but it might also prove to be unfair to the player who sinks a load of moolah into shares early on, only to see the stock price stubbornly stay low for most of the game to cite just one example of potential unfairness.

Despite this being, mechanically, a Eurogame through and through, the theme is very well integrated into the workings of the title in a very non-Euro way. True, there are no passengers depicted, but the requirements for claiming routes make logical sense, the way in which Pan Am expands is similar to how it historically operated, and the details of the events and the gradual introduction of the larger planes are all based on what happened in real life.

It definitely adds to the immersiveness of the game and makes the appealing theme even more enjoyable. There are lots of small touches which show that the designer knew what he was doing in order to create a tight and well balanced game. In my game, my opponent and I were following different strategies. I focused strongly on selling to Pan Am, so my Airport and Destination card purchases were concentrated on those that allowed me to claim routes that were likely to be purchased by the titular corporation soon.

I also kept things lean and mean and usually had a low supply of leftover Planes and Destination cards at the end of each turn. My opponent, on the other hand, decided to grab the longer, higher income routes. So she went harder into the purchase of Planes than I did, particularly the larger ones, and bought more Destination cards as well.

The two strategies turned out to be very well matched, as at the end of the game, we both found ourselves with the same number of Pan Am shares and the exact same amount of cash! However, at that point, I revealed a Directive card which awarded me a free share of stock, giving me the win.

Still, it made for a somewhat peculiar, if very memorable, ending of the game. And that leads me to my one caveat for the design.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000