TransAmerica (board game)
Encyclopedia
TransAmerica is a railroad board game
centered on the construction of railroad track in the United States
. The game was created by Franz-Benno Delonge
and developed by Team Annaberg. It is published in the United States by Rio Grande Games
. In 2003 it was a Mensa Select recipient.
Each player selects one set of markers of the same color; a train for scorekeeping and a cylinder to mark the starting location. The train markers are placed on the thirteen on the score track. The "starting player" is then determined randomly.
Play continues until one player has all of his cities connected to his starting marker or all 84 of the track markers have been used. Players then count how many points it would have taken to build to his remaining cities and subtracts that many points from his points remaining, moving his marker on the scoring track accordingly.
If the game is not over, then the "starting player" card is passed one player to clockwise, and all track and starting markers are removed in preparation for another round.
Board game
A board game is a game which involves counters or pieces being moved on a pre-marked surface or "board", according to a set of rules. Games may be based on pure strategy, chance or a mixture of the two, and usually have a goal which a player aims to achieve...
centered on the construction of railroad track in the United States
United States
The United States of America is a federal constitutional republic comprising fifty states and a federal district...
. The game was created by Franz-Benno Delonge
Franz-Benno Delonge
Franz-Benno Delonge was a designer of German-style board games. He has been nominated for multiple best game awards, including Spiel des Jahres and International Gamers Awards. TransAmerica won the Mensa best mind game award for 2003...
and developed by Team Annaberg. It is published in the United States by Rio Grande Games
Rio Grande Games
Rio Grande Games is a board game publisher based in Rio Rancho, New Mexico. The company primarily imports and localizes foreign language German-style board games.-History:...
. In 2003 it was a Mensa Select recipient.
Setup
The cities on the board are divided into five different regions with seven cities per region. These regions are denoted by circles of different colors. If there are two or three players, the ten cards with dashed circles are removed from play. These cities are the two most difficult to build to in each region.Each player selects one set of markers of the same color; a train for scorekeeping and a cylinder to mark the starting location. The train markers are placed on the thirteen on the score track. The "starting player" is then determined randomly.
Winning
The game is played until one or more players reach zero points when the player with the most points remaining wins. If after the second round, the player with the least number of points has at least four points, the number of points needed to end the game is moved to three points below the player with the least number of points remaining.Rounds of play
In each round, the players are dealt a card (indicating a city) from each region. Each player, beginning with the "starting player" and proceeding clockwise, then places their starting marker. The game proceeds with each player, again in the same order, placing two points' worth of track per turn. Crossing a river or mountain costs two points to build a track, and plains cost one point; unused building points may not be saved. The players may build from any track that can be traced back to his starting marker, including track that was built by other players.Play continues until one player has all of his cities connected to his starting marker or all 84 of the track markers have been used. Players then count how many points it would have taken to build to his remaining cities and subtracts that many points from his points remaining, moving his marker on the scoring track accordingly.
If the game is not over, then the "starting player" card is passed one player to clockwise, and all track and starting markers are removed in preparation for another round.
TransEuropa
TransEuropa is a game almost identical to TransAmerica, except set in Europe. The graphical design has slight differences, with the cards featuring landmarks, not the location in relation to the board. Although the rules are exactly the same, some argue that TransEuropa is harder than TransAmerica because there are more double lines, and more tricky city placement.External links
- TransSib, a PC implementation of TransAmerica written in Java