Carcassonne (video game)

For other uses, see Carcassonne (disambiguation).
For the board game on which the game is based, see Carcassonne (board game).
Carcassonne
Developer(s) Sierra Online
Publisher(s) Sierra Online
Platform(s) Xbox 360, Windows Phone
Release date(s) June 27, 2007[1]
Genre(s) Turn-based strategy
Mode(s) Single-player, multiplayer

Carcassonne is a turn-based strategy video game, based upon the board game of the same name designed by Klaus-Jürgen Wrede for the Xbox 360, developed by Sierra Studios, and Windows Phone, developed by Exozet Games. The Xbox 360 game was released on June 27, 2007,[1] and is the second designer board game to be released on Xbox Live Arcade, the first being Catan.[2] The Windows Phone version was released on October 24, 2012. There is also a version for iOS operating system devices.

Features

Unlike Catan, whose initial implementation included only the base game, Carcassonne includes "The River" expansion (originally published as a separate board game add-on).[2] An extra expansion based on "The River" is available for purchase and download from Xbox Live Arcade, as is the "King & Baron" expansion. According to Sierra Online, additional expansions based on those from the board game including "Inns & Cathedrals" and "The Tower", will be released through Xbox Live at a later point in time.[3] Expansion modules can be enabled or disabled individually based on player preference. The Windows Phone version comes with the River II expansion.

Both online and offline multiplayer modes are supported; while four people can compete against each other offline on the same console, up to five can play via Xbox Live.[4] However, in ranked matches, play is restricted to two players. On the Windows Phone version, up six players can play at a time in either pass-n-play offline or online.

The game also features customizable AI settings and several step-by-step tutorials.[2] The tutorials explain how to play and how the game is normally scored, although the scoring rules can be tweaked when setting up a custom non-ranked game.

Lastly, the title supports the Xbox Live Vision camera, allowing players to view each other during play.

Gameplay

Further information: Carcassonne (board game)

Gameplay mirrors that of the actual board game. Each player is granted seven followers (colloquially called meeples, a portmanteau of either "my" or "miniature" and "people"), and each takes turns placing random land tiles, after the initial "starter tile" is placed, from a group of 71. An optional (30- or 45-second) per-turn timer can be enabled in multiplayer games to prevent extended analysis paralysis; there is no timer in single player games. Players can also customise scoring in casual games to follow the International rules (3rd Edition) or the US rules (1st Edition).

Expansions

As with the board game, various expansions are available to change the gameplay and scoring. Any of the expansions can be used in any combination, together or separately.

The River

If The River expansion is used, a river is first built with 12 extra tiles before main gameplay begins. This serves to add some element of randomness to the board configuration before normal tiles are played. The river acts as a divider between two halves of the land (separating farms), but otherwise does not affect scoring. This expansion was included with the main game download.

The River II

On August 8, 2007, The River II expansion was released.[5] This expansion adds additional river tile pieces, including a fork in the river. The Windows Phone version of the game includes the River II expansion at no additional charge.

King & Baron

On October 3, 2007, the King & Baron expansion pack was released, based on the King & Scout board game expansion. In this expansion, the player who builds the biggest city becomes King of Carcassonne, and at the end of the game receives extra points for every completed city; likewise, the player who builds the biggest road becomes Robber Baron and receives points for every completed road. It also adds 7 new tiles, including a special tile that bridges two cities over one another.

Other downloadable content

The first downloadable content for Carcassonne was a picture pack released on July 16, 2007, named simply "Carcassonne Picture Pack #1".[6] This was followed by a dashboard theme, "Carcassonne Theme #1", on July 31, 2007.[7] Both were priced at the standard rates for these items.

Reception

Reviews of Carcassonne concluded that the Xbox Live Arcade version of the game was indeed a faithful adaptation of a well-respected board game. IGN, awarding it a review score of 8.0 out of 10, summarized this as "The question was whether or not an Xbox Live Arcade version would retain what made the real-world game fun, and the answer is 'indeed.'"[8] GameSpot echoed this sentiment, noting "All things considered, Carcassonne is a solid addition to Live Arcade's slowly increasing library of board games."[9] While the GameSpot review did point out a few difficulties with the automatic camera zooming, the title earned a score of 7.5 out of 10.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Porcaro, John (2007-06-25). "Build a Medieval Empire on Xbox LIVE Arcade with the Popular German Board Game Carcassonne".
  2. 1 2 3 "Official Carcassonne site". Microsoft. 2007-07-13. Archived from the original on 2007-06-04.
  3. Sliwinski, Andrew (2007-05-16). "Joystiq on IGN Preview". Joystiq.
  4. "Carcassonne in June 07 on XBL". Xbox Users Groups. 2007-04-14. Archived from the original on 2007-10-09.
  5. "Marketplace Roundup for August 8, 2007". MajorNelson.com. 2007-08-08.
  6. "Marketplace Content for July 16, 2007". MajorNelson.com. 2007-07-16.
  7. "Marketplace Content for July 31, 2007". MajorNelson.com. 2007-07-31.
  8. Hatfield, Daemon (2007-06-28). "IGN: Carcassonne Review". IGN. Archived from the original on 2007-09-17.
  9. Navarro, Alex (2007-06-28). "Carcassonne for Xbox 360 Review". GameSpot.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/15/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.