Hollandazed: Thoughts, Ideas, and Miscellany
DON'T ROLL DOUBLES (by Tom Russell)
The big idea behind Westphalia is that while y'all are negotiating to end the war, y'all are still clobbering each other, because success on the battlefield makes it easier to get what you want in those talks. This meant the game needed to have a bifurcated structure, one that alternated Diplomacy Phases and Military Phases - carrots and sticks. You would think that a designer with over three dozen wargames to his credit wouldn't have any problem with the stick part of that equation, but it's actually the thing that gave me the most trouble. And until the military stuff...
FROM THE ARCHIVES: ONE STACK TO RULE THEM ALL, AND IN THE DARKNESS BIND THEM (by Tom Russell)
Playtest, playtest, playtest. Even folks who only play games, and never make the transition to designing, know that playtesting is an integral - maybe even the integral - part of the process. A common refrain when a game disappoints us is, "Did they even bother to playtest this?" There are various reasons why we playtest. First, to make sure the game works as intended; second, to make sure the game is fun; third, to catch and eliminate ambiguities; fourth, to make sure that there's some decent amount of replayability; fifth, to ensure the game's balance isn't broken. And there is...
ON PUBLISHING ESCAPE FROM HADES (by Tom Russell)
Nearly all of my games are historical, but years ago I did two genre games for another publisher - one fantasy and one post-apocalyptic science fiction. I found the lack of historical scaffolding both very challenging and quite liberating. Both games had larger art budgets than was typical for the publisher, but not large enough; I had to make some rather severe cuts to reduce the number of illustrations needed. This greatly constrained the scope of both games, and the end result in both cases was something somewhat cramped and small. Both games were flops. Over the years, and especially...
FROM THE ARCHIVES: 2P (by Tom Russell)
I came to wargames somewhat sideways. I had initially operated under the delusion that I was the designer of mid-weight eurogames, only dipping my toe in the hex-and-counter pool as a lark, only to find, to my surprise and delight, that these waters were more agreeable to my peculiar talents. One wargame sold, and then another, and soon I stopped trying to hawk my eurogames altogether so that I could focus on wargames exclusively. Do I miss the euro-style games? Not really. I wasn't very good at designing them, to be honest. Partially this was because I spent considerable time...
THE BAND-AID (by Tom Russell)
One of the most curious things about making weird games on purpose is that there are folks who don't seem to think that it was on purpose. I couldn't really mean for the game to do that; somehow it snuck its way into the design when I wasn't looking. I get this a lot with Table Battles and its mandatory reaction loops. There are folks who feel this is a huge flaw, and they can't believe how obstinate I am in refusing to admit it. But the mandatory reactions aren't just an aspect of the game, they are the game...