
Non-Action Guy: The Sergeants, Lieutenants and, to a lesser degree, Captains are likely to fall victim to this they are too low in rank to pose a credible threat to your opponent, but contrary to the Miners, Scouts and Spy, they likewise lack any special abilities to make up for it.Even if you've only got a handful of weak pieces left while your opponent still has most of his army, if you capture the Flag, you win. I Know You Know I Know: After the initial stages, each player will know the ranks of some of the other's pieces.Highly Specific Counterplay: The Spy's ability to capture the Marshall.(Of course, it's dangerous for them to get too aggressive because of the risk of hitting a bomb.) Frontline General: The Field Marshal and the General are the two most powerful pieces on the board, and are often placed on the front lines for this reason.Femme Fatale: One version of the Spy piece.When your opponent strikes one of the Bombs, he may believe your Flag is there and devote considerable effort to getting at it - thus buying you time to search for his Flag. When placing the pieces, it's standard procedure to put up a decoy Flag, usually a Sergeant or another low-ranking piece, also surrounded by Bombs. But for the Literal-Minded: The Flag is usually placed on the back row, surrounded by two or three Bombs. There is also an option where the defender does not have to declare their piece, only who wins. Faceless Goons: You can't see who's who on your opponent's side.Dastardly Whiplash: The usual Spy piece looks like one of these.Copy Protection: The video game adaptation provides the page image it falls under the "feelies" type.Cartoon Bomb: The Bombs are often depicted as such.Capture the Flag: The entire point of the game.

Still, especially in the early stages of a game, they're often used to strike enemy pieces just to find out their rank (which is why they're called, y'know, scouts).
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Smart piece placement is crucial to victory. Capturing pieces move into the square of the piece they just captured thus the Flag and the Bombs, which can't move, can't strike anything, either.īoth players get 40 squares to place their pieces on, but they may arrange them in any way they sees fit.

1 Flag (can't move, captured by anything that strikes it).If both pieces have the same rank, both are captured.Įach player's army consists of the following pieces, ranked from high to low: You capture the enemy piece if it ranks lower than your own the enemy captures your piece if it ranks lower than his. What happens then depends on your piece's rank and that of the enemy piece. If an enemy piece is next to one of your pieces, you may "strike" it with your piece, and both pieces have to declare their rank. When it's your turn, you may move one of your pieces one square in any of the cardinal directions. Players cannot see the ranks of each other's pieces, so disinformation and discovery (and last but not least, memory) are important elements of the game. The objective of the game is to either find and capture the opponent's Flag or to capture so many of the opponent's pieces that he/she cannot make any further moves.

Pieces represent individual officers and soldiers in an army. Stratego is a board game featuring a 10 × 10 square board and two players with 40 pieces each.
