Rift Trooper
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

''Rift Trooper'' is a 1976 two player
board wargame A board wargame is a wargame with a set playing surface or board, as opposed to being played on a computer or in a more free-form playing area as in miniatures games. The modern, commercial wargaming hobby (as distinct from military exercises, o ...
designed by Richard Bartucci and published by Attack Wargaming Association (AWA). It includes three tactical simulations of the
science fiction Science fiction (sometimes shortened to Sci-Fi or SF) is a genre of speculative fiction which typically deals with imaginative and futuristic concepts such as advanced science and technology, space exploration, time travel, parallel unive ...
novel ''
Starship Troopers ''Starship Troopers'' is a military science fiction novel by American writer Robert A. Heinlein. Written in a few weeks in reaction to the US suspending nuclear tests, the story was first published as a two-part serial in ''The Magazine of F ...
;'' "Squad Sweep", "Operation Royalty", and "Encounter".


Gameplay

''Rift Trooper'' is played on a
hex map A hex map, hex board, or hex grid is a game board design commonly used in wargames of all scales. The map is subdivided into a hexagonal tiling, small regular hexagons of identical size. Advantages and disadvantages The primary advantage of a he ...
, with the map design and alien enemies dependant on the simulation. For each scenario, one player plays as a team of Terran Mobile Infantry and the other as one of three different alien races—humanoids known as Skinnies, arachnid monsters called Bugs, or reptilian warriors known as Thoarks. Each soldier has a separate range, attack factor, defence factor and movement capability depending on their equipment. Players can move by either walking one hex at a time or by jumping straight ahead four hexes. On their turn, players can either attack by shooting, which is limited to a range, or with a nuclear missile that can hit any circle of a six hex radius on the board, although each player only has two per team. Damage done is determined by cross indexing a die roll with the number of hexes between the attacker and their target.


Squad Sweep

The Squad Sweep simulation has the Terran forces raiding a Skinny town. Before starting, the Skinny player visibly places all their soldiers and weaponry on the map in buildings, out in the streets, or on rooftops. Attacking different kinds of buildings gives the Terran player a different number of points, but the attacking trooper must be adjacent to building to do damage. The Terran player has to destroy 13 points worth of Skinny buildings to win, and the Skinny player must wipe out all ten Terran soldiers.


Operation Royalty

The Operation Royalty simulation is the longest ''Rift Trooper'' simulation, in which Terran forces descend into the Bug tunnels to capture or kill the Arachnid leaders and gain information. The number the Terran player are able to capture or are forced to kill determines the degree of victory. Unlike Squad Sweep, the positions of Bugs in the tunnels are not marked by counters, but are instead recorded by the Bug player using a coordinate system. If a Terran soldier passes within one hex of any of the hidden Bugs, or if they move, they are then marked by a counter for the rest of the game.


Encounter

In the Encounter simulation, two Terran squads are involved in a firefight with a single Thoark squad. The winner is the player who destroys the most enemy units.


Reception

Robert C. Kirk reviewed ''Rift Trooper'' in '' The Space Gamer'' No. 11, concluding that "It is a good quality, professionally printed game -- but it is clumsy to play."
Richard Berg Richard Harvey Berg (1943 â€“ July 26, 2019) was a prolific American wargame designer. He was inducted into the Charles Roberts Awards Hall of Fame in 1987. Early life, army, student and lawyer Richard Berg was born in New York City. ...
, in a short review for ''Moves'' No. 31, expressed similar distaste for the game, writing that "the designer thought that three separate maps would dress up some shoddily constructed scenarios. They didn't." In a review in '' The Playboy Winner's Guide to Board Games'', Jon Freeman stated simply of the game that he believed "''Rift Trooper'' is poorly done".


References

{{reflist Attack Wargaming Association games Board games introduced in 1976 Games based on Starship Troopers Wargames introduced in 1976