This is a documentation for Board Game Arena: play board games online !
Gamehelphokito: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(English, not French, on this page.) |
(→How to play?: Added scoring explanation) |
||
Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
*- To move your pieces, you will only be able to move through the occupied squares. Empty squares are passed straight over without counting them. Look for hidden shortcuts to thwart your opponent’s strategy. | *- To move your pieces, you will only be able to move through the occupied squares. Empty squares are passed straight over without counting them. Look for hidden shortcuts to thwart your opponent’s strategy. | ||
*- The game ends when a player isn't able to make a legal move | *- The game ends when a player isn't able to make a legal move | ||
*- Scoring Is calculated by multiplying the top piece on each stack by the number of pieces in the stack. I.e. a stack or 4 with a II on top is worth 2x4=8. | |||
== Links == | == Links == | ||
*- [https://www.cosmoludo.com/hokito-en CosmoLudo] | *- [https://www.cosmoludo.com/hokito-en CosmoLudo] | ||
*- [https://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/114562/hokito BGG] | *- [https://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/114562/hokito BGG] |
Latest revision as of 19:30, 6 April 2025
How to play?
- - To win the game, you’ll have to create stacks of pawns or steal the control of your opponent’s towers.
- - Moves are made by 1, 2 or 3 squares depending on the value of the top pawn of the stack you are moving. Movement is always orthogonal and never diagonal.
- - You can move a stack only if you control it (with a pawn of your color on top).
- - A single pawn can only be stacked on top of another single pawn, and stacks can only land on top of other stacks.
- - To move your pieces, you will only be able to move through the occupied squares. Empty squares are passed straight over without counting them. Look for hidden shortcuts to thwart your opponent’s strategy.
- - The game ends when a player isn't able to make a legal move
- - Scoring Is calculated by multiplying the top piece on each stack by the number of pieces in the stack. I.e. a stack or 4 with a II on top is worth 2x4=8.