![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
| | #1 (permalink) | ||||||||
|
FeverFan227
has no status.
Junior Member ![]()
Join Date: May 2008
Posts: 7
Money: 2 | 1.If you are red, your major threat is on the third and fith row. Your minor threat is on the second, forth, and sixth. A minor threat can help if you have a major theat in a different area. 2.If you are blue, your major threat is on the second, forth, and sixth row. A minor threat can destroy your opponite's major threat if you have your minor threat in a different colum than his/her major threat. It can also force a win if you have two minor threats in different colums. 3.If you are red and you have one or three major threats and the blue with no major or minor threat, you win once the board is filled up. If you have two minor major threat and the blue with nothing, then you will end up sacrificing one in order to win. 4.If you are blue and you have one or more major threat with the red having nothing, then you win once the board is filled up. 5.If red has a major threat and blue also has a major threat (in different colums), then red ends up winning. 6.If blue has a major threat above the red's major threat in the same colum, then blue major threat is pretty much useless. If blue has a major threat under the red's major threat in the same colum, then red's major threat is pretty much useless. 7.If red has a major threat and blue can force him/her out of it (by having a match right under it so that if red doesn't ruin his/her own major threat, then blue can put it there and win) as long as he gets another third or fith colum, then the game will end up with blue destroying the major threat of red unless there is another major threat for red on another colum. There are more tricks than this, but for now I will only tell you these. I must also let you know that red has the advantage. | ||||||||
| |
![]() |
| Bookmarks |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
| |