lost
cities
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Description
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Plays the Lost Cities game by Reiner Knizia.
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Author
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Ken Huffman
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Status
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Working.
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Audience
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People familiar with the game Lost Cities.
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License
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GNU General Purpose
License (GPL).
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Operating System
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OS Independent.
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Language
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Java and plain browser versions.
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Topic
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Silly time waster.
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Future
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Pretty much done. Willing to take enhancement suggestions.
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This program is a two-person turn-based card game. The players can play
against each other across the Internet from separate Java-enabled
computers or plain old browsers.
How install the game on a computer
If you have a capable version of Java on your computer (you can get it
free from
here), click the button below
to start the program:
Microsoft’s version of Java cannot run the program because it is pretty
out of date. Install the version linked to above or use one of the
other methods list below.
How run from your browser
If you don’t have Java anywhere, you can
still run the game by
pointing your browser to
this
page. This HTML version isn’t as full-featured as the Java
versions, but it is still functional and seems to work with every
browser, including small devices that have limited screen space.
Install on a mobile device
If you have a MIDP enabled phone, you can click on the
cities.wml file or download the
cities.jad and
cities.jar
files. See the owner’s manual for your phone on how to install them.If
you have a very small screen, it may not work.
If you have an Internet-connected Palm OS device, you can download the
cities.prc to install on your PDA. It is same
as the phone version and also requires MIDP (downloadable free from
here). The game
will
not work if your Palm device cannot reach the Internet.
Fair warning, the mobile version is not actively being maintained.
You might want to try the other versions instead.
How play the game
If you unfamiliar how to play, you may want to read the
rules
to the game first. "Investment" cards referred to in the rules appear
as "*" on your screen.
When you start the program, you will need to login into the game
server. The program will ask for a user name and password.
The first time you play, select the "Register new user" check box to
create an account. An account is required to play the game.
Account is free and no personal information is requested. The account
allows you to stop and resume games at any time. It is password
protected to prevent others from playing as you or loading your games
to look at your cards.
From there you can open an existing game or create a new game.
You can only view games you are participating in. You can open multiple
games at the same time. Each appears on its own tab.
The top of the window displays your opponent’s tableau. The middle of
the window displays the shared discard piles and the stock. At the
bottom of the window is your tableau and your hand beneath that. Your
opponent cannot see your hand unless they log in as you or look over
your shoulder as you play.
You and your opponent take turns placing cards from your hand to either
your own tableau or the shared discard pile. Cards are placed on the
pile of the matching suit. You can only play a card onto your suit’s
tableau if it is empty or if the value of the card from your hand is
greater than the top card already on the tableau. Investment (*)
cards can only be played before the cards with numeric values. See
the order in which the cards were played in the scoring section
below.
A card can be placed on its suit’s discard pile at any time, empty or
not. After you have placed a card from your hand, draw a card from the
top of the stock or the top card of any of the discard piles (except,
if you just discarded, you cannot pick up that one) so that you have 8
cards again. It is then your opponents turn.
The program can be exited and resumed at any time during a game because
its state is always stored at the server. You can switch between
multiple games without losing your place. While you have a game open,
it will periodically check the server to see if your opponent has taken
his turn.
How score the game
The game is over when the stock is empty. The number appearing on the
stock shows the number of cards left in the stock to help you gauge.
Each suit started in your tableau is totaled for points. Twenty is
subtracted from each suit’s total. So you should not start a pile if
you don’t think you’ll have cards that will add up to at least twenty.
The difference is multiplied by 2, 3 or 4 if there are 1, 2 or 3
Investment (*) cards played. A bonus of twenty is added to your final
score for any pile that has 8 or more cards in it. Empty tableau piles
don’t count for or against you.