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Encyclopedia > Robo Rally
Robo Rally
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Painted playing pieces on factory floor
Players control robots with "program cards" in order to survive and reach checkpoints.
Players: 2–8
Age range: 10 +
Setup time: 10 minutes
Playing time: 120 minutes
Rules complexity: Medium
Strategy depth: High
Random chance: Medium
Skills required: Simple programming


Robo Rally® is a board game published by Wizards of the Coast. It was originally published in 1994 and was created by Richard Garfield, the creator of the card game Magic: The Gathering®. The game and its expansions received a total of four Origins Awards.


Gameplay

In Robo Rally, players assume control of one of many "Robot Control Computers" in a dangerous widget factory filled with moving, course-altering conveyor belts, metal-melting laser beams, bottomless pits, crushers, and a variety of other obstacles. The goal in a game of Robo Rally is, apart from survival, to be the first to reach a pre-designated number of checkpoints in a particular order. However, the real difficulty in Robo Rally is movement, which is accomplished with the randomly dealt program cards.

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Program cards

The program cards specify movement, such as move forward one, turn left or u-turn. The cards have to be arranged by the player in the specific manner they wish the robot to move. Each player receives up to nine cards each turn. They use five of the cards to specify their robot's movement for the given turn, playing each card face down into one of five available "registers". All robots move simultaneously, each player revealing each register in turn. Robots attempting to move into the same space at the same time are resolved by priority numbers printed on the cards. Players with damaged robots receive fewer cards: with one point of damage, the player receives eight cards, with two points, seven cards, and so on. When a player's robot takes five or more points of damage, its registers become "locked," keeping specific program cards in play until the robot is repaired.


Robots can also carry optional weapons and devices, which add to the carnage and mayhem. These devices can cause additional damage, allow robots to move differently, affect the movement of other robots, and disrupt opponents' plans in other ways.


The metal pieces in Robo Rally were designed by Phil Foglio, who also did the artwork for the game.


Game and Expansions

  • Robo Rally: The original game, includes basic boards, metal miniatures, basic selection of cards. You need this to play.
  • Armed & Dangerous: The largest expansion. Contains additional boards, and a variety of additional weapon cards.
  • Crash & Burn: Additional boards.
  • Grand Prix: Additional boards.
  • Radioactive: Additional boards.

External links



 

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