Varying Turn Orders
Turn taking sequences that change, or can be changed, during gameplay.
Many traditional games are played by players making their actions according to a turn sequence. When this turn sequence is not static, i.e. players do not always play in the same order throughout the entire game, this means that a game has Varying Turn Orders.
Contents
Examples
Systems for Varying Turn Orders are found in Board Games and Card Games, much likely because they most often use turn taking. Puerto Rico and San Juan use a round-robin system for who starts a turn, which can be seen as turn taking sequence on its own on a higher level. Agricola, Caylus, and Dominant Species have a fixed turn order but players can change this through explicit actions; Carolus Magnus requires players to play tokens that determine the next turn order for the next turn. Egizia, Golf, and Ursuppe determine the turn order for each turn based on the players' current positions in the game.
Using the pattern
There are three main ways of creating Varying Turn Orders. The first way is to have a fixed structure of how the turn order is varied between Rounds. The simplest of these, found in Puerto Rico and San Juan, is to have regular turn orders but let the player that was the second player in the previous Round become the first in the next one. This means that First Player Advantages are modified by letting those having this advantage become the last player the next Round. The second way to create Varying Turn Orders is to have an function that after each Round determines what the order should be for the next Round. One example of this solution is to read the order from a Score Track and letting the player with the lowest Score begin (this is done for example in Egizia. The third way is to have a turn order that does not change by itself but let players have a Freedom of Choice to change it by actions. To avoid too much affects on each others actions this last solution is usually restricted so that either only one change can be done or that players can take specified positions.
Not that Varying Turn Orders can be applied both on Planning and Execution Phases, and can be applied in different ways to the two. Dominant Species is an example of this: the turn order to place action tokens in Planning Phases is determined by a linear sequence where two neighboring positions can change each turn due to a player action while Execution Phases are done in a sequence of action categories.
Interface Aspects
Unless the current or upcoming sequence can be readily read from the position of other game elements, the use of First Player Tokens may be appropriate for games with Varying Turn Orders.
Consequences
Varying Turn Orders modify Turn Taking in games. By removing, or at least lessening, the Asymmetric Starting Conditions that First Player Advantages give they can have Balancing Effects on games. They can however set up Flip-Flop Events so that the last player of one turn may be the first of the next, in practice having two turns in a row.
Relations
Can Instantiate
Balancing Effects, Flip-Flop Events
Can Modulate
Asymmetric Starting Conditions, Execution Phases, First Player Advantages, Planning Phases, Rounds, Turn Taking
Can Be Instantiated By
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Can Be Modulated By
First Player Tokens, Freedom of Choice, Score Tracks
Possible Closure Effects
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Potentially Conflicting With
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History
New pattern created in this wiki.
References
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