Battle robots, gangs, and more in tactical post-apocalyptic warfare.
Tác Giả: Michał Oracz
Họa Sĩ: Mateusz Bielski, Piotr Cieśliński, Piotr Foksowicz, Jakub Jabłoński, Tomasz Jedruszek, Łukasz Lalko
Nhà Phát Hành: Portal Games, FunBox Jogos, Heidelberger Spieleverlag, HomoLudicus, IELLO, Magellan
Neuroshima Hex! is a strategy game set in the post-apocalyptic world of Neuroshima, a Polish role-playing game. Each player leads one of four armies: Borgo, Hegemonia (Hegemony), Moloch, and Posterunek (Outpost). Each army deck consists of 34 tiles: soldiers, support tiles, and special actions. You win when all enemy headquarters are destroyed or when your headquarters is the least damaged at the end of the game.
The second edition of Neuroshima Hex!, released at Spiel 2007, had updated graphics and a new, larger board; a special expansion pack sold at the same time included the Neuroshima Hex! Doomsday Machine 1.0, a fifth army that could be used against any of the other ones.
The first French edition of Neuroshima Hex!, released in 2008, included an additional four Mercenary tiles. The first English edition from Z-Man Games that same year includes the Mercenary tiles and the Mad Bomber tile.
Neuroshima Hex! 3.0, released in 2013 from Z-Man Games, includes rule corrections, the Doomsday Machine army (for five armies in the NH base game), a solo variant with 55 puzzle cards that present you with challenging situations, and new three-player variants: Deathmatch; Deathmatch with scores; one player vs. a team; and a team match (with one player playing two armies).
The game is also expanded by Unofficial Neuroshima Hex! expansions, available here on BGG.
Note: All base game and expansion armies in all versions/editions are functionally compatible! The only differences between armies from e.g. 3.0 and 2.5 (or whatever) are art & graphic design. There is no need to post another thread asking about this...
Note: There is no solitaire bot/AI/system to compete against. The only options for "solo" play are soloing multiple factions yourself, or solving puzzles (like Chess checkmate problems) available in some editions and expansions.