Jokerball
Jokerball ist ein würfelbasiertes Fußballspiel für 2 Spieler. Es wird auf einem 6 Felder breiten sechseckigen Spielbrett mit 91 Feldern gespielt. Die roten Figuren besetzen die ersten beiden Reihen auf der roten Seite und die blauen Figuren die ersten beiden Reihen auf der blauen Seite. In der Mitte befindet sich ein grüner Ball. Mark Steere hat Jokerball im Dezember 2024 entwickelt.
Die Spieler würfeln abwechselnd und bewegen ihre Spielfiguren und den Ball. Der violette Würfel gibt die Entfernung an, um die eine Spielfigur bewegt werden muss. Der grüne Würfel gibt die Richtung an, in die der Ball bewegt werden muss. Die Einschränkungen für die Bewegungen sind in den Spielregeln beschrieben.
Das Ziel ist es, den Ball über die gegnerische Seite vom Spielfeld zu befördern. Die Spielfiguren kämpfen gegeneinander und eliminieren sich gegenseitig, wodurch sie den Weg zum Tor freimachen, sodass der Ball hindurchrollen kann.
Spielerzahl: 2
Spieldauer: 9 mn
Komplexität: 2 / 5
Spiele Jokerball und 1194 andere Spiele online.
Kein Download notwendig, spiele direkt im Webbrowser.
Mit deinen Freunden und tausenden Spielern aus der ganzen Welt.
Kostenlos.
Spiele Jokerball und 1194 andere Spiele online.
Kein Download notwendig, spiele direkt im Webbrowser.
Mit deinen Freunden und tausenden Spielern aus der ganzen Welt.
Kostenlos.
Kurzregel
Jokerball is a violent soccer game. It involves strategy and luck.
The hexagonal board is walled off on the two left sides and the two right sides, and open on the two remaining, opposite sides. The open sides are the goals. Men start out lined up in front of their own goals, and the ball is in in the center.
The men gradually move out and kill each other off, thereby opening holes in their defenses and making it possible for the ball to exit the board through a goal. The purple die determines the distance a man must travel, but the player chooses his direction. The green die determines the direction the ball must travel, but the player chooses its distance.
More specifically, a man makes a non-capturing move in one of the two forward directions in a straight line, along a path of contiguous, unoccupied cells. It travels exactly the distance indicated by the purple die, unless blocked by a wall or the ball, in which case it stops short, adjacent to the block.
A man makes a capturing move in any direction, in a straight line, along a path of contiguous, unoccupied cells, terminated by a friendly or enemy man, within the range indicated by the purple die. The terminus man is captured by replacement.
After moving one of your men, you must move the ball, in the direction indicated by the green die, as described below, along a path of contiguous, unoccupied cells, any distance.
Green Die Indicated Ball Directions: 1 - backward left. 2 - left. 3 - forward left. 4 - forward right. 5 - right. 6 - backward right. The directions are from the perspective of the player moving the ball. The players' directions are opposite from each other. So for example, Red's 2 is the opposite direction of Blue's 2. Red's 2 is the same direction as Blue's 5.
You win when the ball exits the board through the goal opposite of where you're sitting. It doesn't matter who moves the ball off the board. It's remotely possible that you would have to move the ball through your own goal and lose the game.
You can undo man selection by clicking any unhighlighted cell.
Jokerball is played in matches of from 1 to 21 games. You choose how many at the outset.
A doubling cube can be employed in the match, as an option. You can search online for Backgammon doubling cube for information about that. But basically, if I offer you a double, and if you accept it, the game is now worth double the points. If you don't accept it, you lose the game.
Jokerball uses the Crawford rule. There's information about this online as well. If a player is 1 point away from winning the match, the next game is a Crawford game, in which the doubling cube can't be offered. There can be only one Crawford game per match.
The "dead cube" rule (as defined by USBGF and WBGF): If the player owning the doubling cube could win the match by winning the current game, then she has no reason to offer a double, and is not allowed to offer a double.
Nessuno, a professional and highly skilled developer, has been invaluable in bringing you Jokerball. Advice and suggestions are helpful, but only get me so far. Sometimes you need a pro to get in there, find the problem, and fix it. Nessuno did that - a few times. Thanks, Nessuno 🙂🙏
