home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- u
- T R I A N G U L A T I O N
- Program by Dave Johannsen
- Text by Fender Tucker
-
-
- On LOADSTAR #68 we presented
- Dave Johannsen's last game,
- QUADRILATION, and it generated the
- most positive praise of any game in
- recent history. You wouldn't believe
- the number of people who lost sleep
- playing that game into the night,
- forsaking food, drink and spouses.
-
- Well, Dave has done it again, but
- this time he gives you a break; he's
- chopped a leg of his polygon of games
- and created TRIANGULATION, a game of
- equilateral triangles.
-
- It's a little like Tic-Tac-Toe,
- but tougher. You and your computer
- opponent take turns playing pieces on
- a triangular grid, trying to create an
- equilateral triangle of a certain
- type of playing piece. The first
- player to do so, wins.
-
- Let's start at the beginning.
- From the Options Menu you can set up
- the parameters for the game you want
- to play. Anytime you want to get
- back to this Menu you can press F8.
- Keep that key in mind if you want to
- give up before you disgracefully
- lose.
-
- This is what the Options Menu
- looks like.
-
- F1 Change Size 4, 5, 6 or 7
- F2 List Instructions
- F3 Change Color Scheme
- F4 Change Who Starts Me/You
- F5 Change Strategy Open/Closed
- F7 Play Game
- F8 Return to LOADSTAR
-
- Let's take them in order. By
- pressing F1 you can cycle through the
- four game board sizes, 4, 5, 6 and 7.
- Play at Size 4 to begin, and move on
- up as you gain courage and loathing
- for your computer opponent.
-
- F2 lists a page of instructions.
- I'll go into more detail here.
-
- You can cycle through a half-dozen
- or so color schemes for the game
- board by repeatedly pressing F3.
- Choose whichever appeals to your
- color sense or monitor.
-
- F4 toggles the starting player,
- you or the computer. Whoever you've
- chosen is printed to the right of
- this line on the Menu. Since the
- winner is the last person to be able
- to play (if no equilateral triangles
- are made by either player), this can
- be very important.
-
- The computer will use two
- different strategies, neither of
- which is "better" than the other (as
- far as I know). The F5 key will
- toggle between the two. OPEN
- strategy will cause the computer to
- play a piece as FAR away from other
- pieces on the board as possible.
- CLOSED strategy will cause the
- computer to play as CLOSE to other
- pieces as possible. Try them both,
- just for variety.
-
- Finally we come to F7, which
- takes you to the game board. The
- grid of the chosen size will be drawn
- and a box in the upper right of the
- screen will show you the pieces.
-
- There are four types of pieces,
- a diamond, an X, a triangle, and an O.
- The idea is to make an equilateral
- triangle on the board out of three
- similar pieces. If you've been away
- from geometry class for the past few
- decades, an equilateral triangle is a
- triangle whose three sides are all of
- the same length.
-
- Notice that A, B and C on the
- game board form an equal-sided
- triangle, as do A, D and F. Some
- other triangles aren't so obvious.
- How about C, D and I? Or D, J and R
- (on a Size 6 board)? The equilateral
- triangles can be "canted", if you
- will.
-
- In the lower right side of the
- screen is a prompt box that tells you
- what the program is waiting for.
- When it's your turn, it'll ask you to
- choose a piece (by pressing 1, 2, 3
- or 4), then choose a board "square"
- (by pressing the corresponding
- letter. Press RETURN to register
- your move.
-
- You may change your choices at
- any time before pressing RETURN.
-
- The computer will play very
- quickly and won't make a mistake. If
- there is an equilateral triangle to be
- made, he will find it.
-
- Therefore, the only way for you
- to make a triangle is to force him to
- play a piece where he really doesn't
- want to play one. It's not easy to
- do, but that's what a Dave Johannsen
- game is all about.
-
- You can also win if the board is
- filled up and you are the last player
- to play. On the smaller sized boards
- this may be your best strategy.
-
- If you press F8 while in the play
- mode, you'll go back to the Options
- Menu. Press F8 at the Options Menu
- and you'll go back to LOADSTAR.
-
- Plan on losing a few games (er --
- a [lot]) until you get a real grasp of
- the intricacies of the triangular
- board. Then you can go all-out and do
- what we all enjoy best: humiliating
- your C-64 into shameful submission.
- There's nothing so pretty as the
- words, "YOU WIN" appearing in the
- prompt box of this program.
-
- Who says the computer doesn't
- bring out the best in us?
-
- FT
-
-
- [DAVE'S AFTER-GRUMBLE:] Errrrr! This
- game really chaps my mind. I thought I
- had good spacial reasoning -- but I
- keep missing obvious triangles. Maybe
- I need some spacial education!
-
- DMM
-
-
-