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The Rivals for Catan (German: Die Fürsten von Catan) is an updated revision of the Catan Card Game released in 2010. The development of The Rivals for Catan and its evolution from the Catan Card Game was documented on the official Catanism blog in eight parts, titled "The Reform of the Catan Card Game".
Like Catan, Zarahemla uses a somewhat modular board structure, but instead of individual hexes (as is the case of Catan), Zarahemla uses five strips of hexes - one five-hex strip, two four-hex strips, and three-hex strips, which could be oriented and rearranged as in the standard game. These strips of hexes are double–sided.
The Rivals for Catan (German: Die Fürsten von Catan) is an updated revision of the Catan Card Game, a card game adaptation of The Settlers of Catan. The game was released in 2010. It is a member of the Catan series of games, and is published by Kosmos in German and Mayfair Games in English. Like its predecessor, The Rivals for Catan is
All of the cards were later released in the five 1999 expansions and the rules were released in the Catan Card Game Expansions set in 2002. Trade & Change - Released in 1999 and included in the Catan Card Game Expansions pack, this expansion focuses on enhancing trading and resource development, while decreasing the importance of knights.
Star Trek Catan is a spin-off of the original series released in 2012 by Mayfair Games. [34] The game uses the same basic components with new names, new graphics, and some minor rules additions. The building costs and resources match the original game. It incorporates the "Helpers of Catan" expansion, with the cards renamed as Star Trek characters.
Catan: Cities & Knights (German: Städte und Ritter), formerly The Cities and Knights of Catan, is an expansion to the board game The Settlers of Catan for three to four players (five to six player play is also possible with the Settlers and Cities & Knights five to six player extensions; two-player play is possible with the Traders & Barbarians expansion).
Catan Card Game (1996) and its successor The Rivals for Catan (2010) can be played as a customizable card game with the “tournament rules” ChessHeads [251] (2004) Codex: Card-Time Strategy [252] (Sirlin Games) (2016) Doomtown: Reloaded (Alderac Entertainment Group/Pine Box Entertainment)
The game is different from Catan in a couple of ways, such as the differences in the development cards and what certain aspects of the game are known as. The main difference is the "fixed" nature of the board, where (like many other Catan variants) both the hexagonal land tiles and the numerical disks are printed directly onto the board, while ...