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| ==The Ways of Play==
| | :''The rules to Dvorak are also available in [[Правила|Russian]], [[Regeln|German]], [[Pravidlá|Slovak]], [[Zasady|Polish]] and in [[Règles|French]].'' |
| | :''An older version of this page is archived [[Rules/Old|here]].'' |
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| Dvorak can be played in one of two ways - you can take a deck from the archives and play it as a standalone card game (in which case you only need the Basic Rules), or you can take a pile of fresh blank cards and create a new deck from scratch (using both the Basic Rules and Creative Rules). | | This is how a game of Dvorak works. You can either start with a deck of cards that somebody else has made (we've got lots of them [[:Category:Decks|archived]] on this site), or you can start with a pile of blank cards and build a new deck from scratch. |
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| The game can also be played online via telnet or Thoth, as well as the obvious real-life bits-of-cardboard approach. Depending on how you're playing, getting started is slightly different:-
| | ==Basic rules== |
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| Real Life, New Deck You'll need a pack of blank cards (unlined 5x3" record cards do the job quite nicely; business cards are okay for more laconic or squinty games) and something to scrawl on them with.
| | Dvorak is played entirely with cards, and there are just two types of card - |
| Real Life, Archived Deck You can either copy each card onto a blank one by hand, or print the deck out from the Web page.
| | '''Things''' and '''Actions'''. When you play a Thing card, it goes onto |
| | the table in front of you and stays there, usually having a useful effect |
| | while it remains in play; when you play an Action card, it does whatever it |
| | does and goes to a discard pile. |
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| A printed deck can be played with as-is, glued onto cardboard (sticking them artlessly onto larger record cards works reasonably enough) or slipped into a plastic deck protector with a spare other-card-game card to bolster it.
| | <div style="padding:16px 0px">[[Image:Examplecards.gif|800px|center]]</div> |
| Telnet,
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| Either Virtually any computer with an Internet connection can do this, with no extra software. Connect to AbsoluteMUSH and seek out a known Dvorak player.
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| MUSH players may wish to have the Dvorak Engine command list open in another window while they play, for reference; if you're completely new to MUSHing, the basics are covered in this brief introduction.
| | Take the deck of cards (if you're making up a new game, you need to [[#Making a deck|make these cards first]]), shuffle it, and deal five cards to each player |
| Thoth,
| | (which they hold in their hand where other players can't see). The rest |
| Either Thoth is a graphical card-game engine designed for email or real-time online play - refer to its Web pages for details on installation and usage. A couple of decks from the Dvorak archive are available for use in Thoth, and the latest versions of the software support dynamic card creation.
| | of the cards go in the middle of the table as a face-down draw pile, and whenever |
| | a card is discarded or destroyed, it goes into a face-up discard pile. |
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| Nobody's really tested Thoth for making a new game from scratch; the process will be properly documented at some future date.
| | Starting with a random player, you take turns in order. A turn consists |
| | of:- |
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| ==The Basic Rules==
| | * Drawing the top card from the draw pile. (If the draw pile's empty, shuffle the discard pile and turn it over to make a new draw pile.) |
| | * Playing up to two cards from your hand. You can play one Thing and one Action per turn (or just one of those, or no cards at all). |
| | * Checking your hand size; if you have more than five cards, discard down to five. |
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| ===Ninety-Nine Word Summary===
| | The game continues until somebody meets whatever victory condition the |
| | deck has. (Some decks have fixed victory conditions, while others have |
| | them written on a card - ''"when you play this card, you win the game if..."'') |
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| All you really need to know about playing a Dvorak deck can be said in ninety-nine words:-
| | ==Making a deck== |
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| :Shuffle the cards into a draw pile.
| | If you're making a new deck from scratch, you need to prepare an initial set cards before the game begins. Take a pile of about forty blank cards (more if you have a lot of players), and distribute it amongst the players. |
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| :Draw five cards each. Choose who takes the first turn.
| | Before you start creating the cards, decide whether you want to have a theme to the game or not, and whether it needs a fixed victory condition (''"If you have five pirates or ninjas in play, and none of the other type, you win!"'') or one that you can write on one or more of the cards (''"If you have more than seven building cards on the table when you play this card, you win."''). |
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| :Each turn, draw a card from the top of the draw pile, then play a Thing and/or an Action. (Things go onto the table in front of the person who played them, Actions go face-up onto the discard pile.)
| | Players can then start creating cards, writing them up (with or without a picture) and throwing them into the middle of the table. To get a good sized deck, try to get nine or ten cards from everyone. A useful way to easily distinguish Things from Actions is to have two coloured marker pens, and to underline the card titles in different colours. |
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| :If you've got more than five cards in your hand at the end of your turn, discard down to five. Then it's the next Player's turn.
| | Each player has absolute veto power over the cards being created - if you see something that you don't like, for whatever reason, pick the card out and see what everyone else thinks. A card only makes it into the actual game if everyone is happy with it. |
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| :When the draw pile's empty, shuffle the discard pile to make a new one.
| | When you're done, you've got a deck of cards - you can now play a game with it, as described above. |
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| :And that's it.
| | ===Adding and changing cards=== |
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| The rest of the Basic Ruleset just clarifies and explains things a little more carefully - if you've played other card games before, or are feeling impetuous, you can safely ignore it all until you need to check something. Get playing.
| | You can also add new cards to the game while it's being played - again, |
| | just write it up and throw it onto the table. If nobody wants to veto it, |
| | it gets shuffled into the draw pile. |
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| ===Card Overview===
| | If you want to remove a card from the game or just change the wording of |
| | it (maybe because it's too powerful, or because it clashes ambiguously with |
| | another card), then announce your intention and see what the other players think. |
| | If nobody objects, then you can remove or change the card. |
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| Whatever you're playing, there are two types of card in a Dvorak deck; Actions and Things.
| | ===Game structure=== |
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| Actions represent one-off events, and can affect any aspect of the game. Some Actions specify that they can be played out of turn, either as a response to something else happening or with no excuse at all.
| | Regular players might like to agree on a basic structure for the game, when making a new deck, so that the final game is a bit more honed. |
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| When a Player plays an Action card from their hand, it has the effect the card specifies and is then placed on the discard pile. Some example Action cards from the deck archive are:-
| | If you agree to restrict the nature of what Things can and can't represent (''"absolutely every Thing in this deck is either a monkey, or a piece of food"''), or decide what variables like "number of cards in hand" mean in the game world (''"cards in hand are analogous to 'money'"''), then you'll automatically get more card synergy, and a lot of card juxtapositions that are funny while still making sense. It's also much easier to write cards, if you know roughly what sort of stuff is going to be out there, and agreeing on clear subtypes for Things lets you make cards that only affect those things. |
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| Espionage
| | ==Advanced rules== |
| Take a random card from an opponent's hand.
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| Secret Identity
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| Destroy a Hero or Villain card and replace it with a Hero or Villain from your hand.
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| Take Off Every Zig
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| For each Zig you control, destroy a Base.
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| Would You Like A Jelly-Baby?
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| You may play this card at any time to stop an Action from affecting you or your hand (but not your Things).
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| Things typically represent physical objects, or states of affairs. When a Player plays a Thing card from their hand, it is put on the table in front of them and remains there until another card does something to remove it. When a Thing is "destroyed", it goes to the discard pile.
| | Over the years, the game has developed a few extra, optional rules to cover the sorts of mechanics that tend to come up a lot. Adopt or adapt them if they seem useful. |
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| Some Things do nothing except exist (owning them perhaps being useful for other purposes); other Things might - if their card text says so - have an effect on the game while they remain in play, have a one-off effect when they're first played, or have effects that trigger when something else happens. Examples of each of these types of Thing would be:-
| | ===Jargon=== |
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| Reykjavik
| | A lot of the archived Dvorak decks use consistent terminology like "discard" and "destroy", which allow cards to be written more concisely. It's easier to say "opponent discards a card" instead of "a player other than you discards a card from their hand", if everybody knows what "opponent" and "discard" mean. |
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| Frenzy
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| Any number of Actions may be played each turn.
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| Cardboard Box
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| When Cardboard Box comes into play, its controller may draw a card.
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| Doomsday Device
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| If a Location is destroyed, destroy all Locations.
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| Some Things can be played "onto" other Things. When you play these, you choose an existing Thing for them to be attached to, and they usually give that Thing some sort of bonus or penalty while they remain in play. If a Thing is destroyed, any Things that were played onto it are also destroyed (although not vice versa). Examples might be:-
| | You're encouraged to make up your own jargon, but there's a [[glossary]] of the terms we tend to use on the site. |
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| Flak Armour
| | ===Special rules=== |
| Play onto a Thing - that Thing gets +2 to defence rolls.
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| Short Circuit
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| Play onto a Thing - that Thing may not use its Actions.
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| There's one other type of Thing that tends to crop up fairly often - a Thing that gives its controller the ability to do something instead of playing an Action card, during their turn.
| | "Special rules" are additions to the basic game rules to give the game a bit more depth. Rules like ''"each player starts with twenty hit points and you're out of the game at zero"'', so that people can make cards that say ''"every player loses 5 hit points"'' or ''"you gain 10 hit points"'' without having to define what hit points are on every card. |
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| The shorthand "Action: [do something]" means "In place of playing an Action, the controller of this card may [do something]". The produced effect counts as an Action, to all intents and purposes (although the Thing card stays in play). For example:-
| | If you want to add a special rule to the game, suggest it in the same way as a card - if everyone's in favour, it gets added. |
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| Graverobber
| | ===Action abilities=== |
| Action: Choose a Body Part from the discard pile and put it into your hand. | |
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| Vorpal Blade
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| Action: Snicker-Snack! Destroy a Monster.
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| Cone Rifle (Blue)
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| Action: A lower-Clearance Troubleshooter discards two cards at random.
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| (Where a card says something like "Destroy a Thing" or "Discard a card", it carries the implicit suffix "...of your choice.")
| | One of the early Dvorak decks included a Thing that said ''"Each turn, instead of playing an Action card, you may destroy a Thing."'' - the player who controlled it could skip playing an Action card during a turn, to trigger a special effect from the Thing. |
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| ===Starting the Game===
| | This became so widely used that a shorthand developed for it. Instead of writing ''"Each turn, instead of playing an Action card..."'', a card would just say ''"Action:"'' - whatever's after the colon is what you get to do instead of playing an Action card from your hand. |
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| (If you're making a new deck from scratch, you should first create at least five times as many cards as there are Players - see 3.2 - Starting the Creative Game.)
| | This is called an "action ability", and still counts as an Action for the purposes any other cards that affect or react to Actions being played. |
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| Take all the cards in the deck and shuffle them together, placing them in a face-down pile, in easy reach of all Players. This is the draw pile, where cards are drawn from throughout the game.
| | ===Playing cards onto other cards=== |
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| Clear a space next to the draw pile for the discard pile, which is where discarded cards will go, face-up.
| | If you like, you can specify that some Thing cards can be played "onto" |
| | other Thing cards to give them some sort of bonus or penalty (like armour, |
| | or equipment, or a brain-sucking alien). A useful rule for these is that |
| | if the Thing it was played onto is destroyed or otherwise leaves play, |
| | the Thing that was played onto it is destroyed. |
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| Each Player then draws five cards, and the game begins, starting with a randomly-determined Player.
| | ==Variants== |
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| ===Turn Structure=== | | ===Multi-deck Dvorak=== |
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| A Player's turn, in Dvorak, is divided into four simple stages, which occur one after the other:-
| | Although it's possible to make a normal Dvorak deck where two different |
| | 'sides' are in conflict (as in the [[Day of the Triffids deck]]), such |
| | games either have to be vague (players aren't forced to pick a side, and |
| | can change and mix allegiances as much as they like) or include |
| | redundancy (players are forced to choose a side at the start of the |
| | game, and the other side's cards are useless to them except as |
| | discard-fodder). |
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| Draw At the start of a Player's Turn, that Player draws a card from the the top of the draw pile.
| | A more effective way to create such a game is to have separate decks, |
| | each deck focusing solely on that side. |
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| (If the draw pile is ever empty when a Player needs to draw from it, the discard pile should be shuffled and turned over to make the new draw pile, which the Player then draws from. If both the draw and discard pile are empty, cards may not be drawn.)
| | Multi-deck Dvorak is played in the same way as normal Dvorak, except |
| Play During this stage the Player may play one Action card and one Thing card (or just one or the other, or nothing at all). They can play a Thing then an Action, or an Action then a Thing; there's no fixed sequence. Thing cards are put into play on the table, Action cards are placed face-up on the top of the discard pile.
| | that: |
| Discard If the Player now has more than five cards in their hand, he or she must discard cards from their hand to the discard pile, until only five are left.
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| End The turn ends and it becomes the next Player's turn, proceeding clockwise or alphabetically or however you want to do it.
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| ===Things You Can't Do===
| | * Each player has their own draw and discard pile. |
| | * When a card is destroyed or discarded, it is sent to the discard pile of the player whose deck it came from. |
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| Players aren't allowed to look through the draw pile, although they may browse the discard pile at any time.
| | If playing creatively, new cards are created as normal, going into the |
| | | creator's deck by default. You can still veto other player's cards, but |
| Players aren't allowed to look through each other's hands, but they are allowed to see how many cards another Player has in their hand.
| | in this case it might be more useful to resolve disputes by creating a |
| | | similar card for your own deck - "if you can have something that destroys |
| Players can't discard cards whenever they feel like it; they can only discard cards when a card tells them to, or when they're discarding down to five at the end of a turn.
| | all my aliens, I'm going to have something that makes you discard your |
| | | entire hand". |
| (Players can't discard below five at the end of their turn, either.)
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| ===Special Rules===
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| As well as the cards, a Dvorak deck may have any number of Special Rules - these are additions or alterations to the basic Dvorak rules, and are in effect throughout the game. An addition might be something like "Each Player has an amount of Gold, which starts at zero and is affected by cards.", an alteration could be "Hand size is three instead of five."
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| Special Rules should be noted on paper (or on a spare card) somewhere at the side of play. When printing a deck from the online archive, its Special Rules (if any) can be printed onto some of its cards - these should be removed from the deck before it's shuffled to make a draw pile.
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| Although Special Rules might be written on cards, they aren't considered to be cards for the purposes of the game - they aren't Things, they can't be destroyed by an Action that says "Tear a card up", they don't belong to any particular Player, and so forth.
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| ===Winning===
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| There's no fixed way to win a game of Dvorak; each deck has its own particular path to victory. Sometimes it's a Thing card, sometimes it's an Action, and sometimes it's a permanent Special Rule. Some decks have a single victory condition, others have a choice of several.
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| Some examples:-
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| Stayin' Alive
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| Play only if your band has three or more people in it. Your inane cover-single wins the hearts of the kiddies, and the game!
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| Lightning Strike
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| If you control a Head, a Body, two Arms and two Legs, you win the game.
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| Special Rule
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| The first Player to control five Laps wins the game.
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| Some decks don't have any ways to "win", as such, and instead progress by Players being knocked out. In such a game, the last Player remaining is the winner.
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| ===Conflicts and Precedence===
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| If a card contradicts a Dvorak Rule (eg. a Thing says that its controller doesn't need to discard cards at the end of his or her turn, but the basic Dvorak Rules say that all Players must discard down to five cards), the card always takes precedence. You can expect this to happen quite a lot.
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| Cards (and Special Rules) can occasionally contradict one another - you can usually resolve the conflicts with sheer common sense, but to be specific about it:-
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| * If one card denies something and another permits it, the denial always takes precedence. For example, if one Thing in play says "Players may not take cards from the discard pile." and someone plays an Action that says "Take a Thing from the discard pile and put it into play.", the denial takes precedence and the Action has no effect.
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| * If two cards contradict one another on the same issue, but one is more specific - "Everyone's hand size is four" versus "The hand size of this Thing's controller is six" - then the more specific card (in this case, the latter) takes precedence.
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| * If two cards flatly contradict one another with equal scope - "Everyone's hand size is four" versus "Everyone's hand size is six" - the most recently-played card takes precedence and the contradicting aspect of the older one is ignored for as long as the newer one is in effect.
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| Special Rules are treated as if they were cards, when resolving precedence issues.
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| (If you're creating a new deck, conflicting cards can and should be rewritten to clarify the contradiction - in the third example above, rewording both Things to "Everyone's hand size is increased/decreased by one" or adding an "If [the other card] is in play, destroy it" clause would be elegant resolutions, but even something as specific as "This card takes precedence over [some other specific card]" is fair enough.)
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| The Creative Rules
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| ===Blank Cards===
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| In a game of Creative Dvorak, there is an extra pile of cards apart from the Draw and discard piles - the Blank Card Pile. This is, as the name hints, a pile of blank cards, and it should sit within reasonably easy reach of all Players.
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| If the Blank Card Pile ever runs empty, it can be topped up with a fresh pack of blank cards. If your immediate environment runs out of blank cards, or your pens run out of ink, no new cards may be created.
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| ===Starting the Creative Game===
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| Before a Creative game of Dvorak begins, Players should create new cards until the draw pile contains at least five times as many cards as there are Players - ideally about seven or eight cards per Player.
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| This stage of the game is naturally a good time to agree on a theme for the deck, if any, perhaps including the means of victory and some terminology. ("Okay, a Frankenstein theme. This Lightning Strike card will be the victory mechanism, and let's say that Thing cards should represent either Body Parts, Staff or Equipment.")
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| ===Creating a Card===
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| In a game of Creative Dvorak, any Player may create a new card at any time - he or she simply takes a card from the Blank Card Pile and writes a title on it, along with any required card text and perhaps a picture. He or she should also mark whether the card is a Thing or an Action, by underlining the card title with a coloured pen, or something.
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| After a card has been created, it is presented to the other Players for their immediate judgment - the game stops while they decide, and each Player must say whether they are in favour of the card, or against it.
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| If every Player is in favour of the card, it is accepted and shuffled into the draw pile. If any Player is against it, however, it is rejected and set aside, having no effect on the game. (Although it can, of course, be adjusted and reproposed - even reproposed verbatim if the reasons for rejection were simple bad timing.)
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| Once a card has been accepted or rejected, play continues.
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| If you're playing the telnet MUSH version of Dvorak, new cards are created by entering:-
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| newcard cardname/(A or T)/cardtext
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| For example:-
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| newcard Armageddon/A/Destroy all Things.
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| The newly created card will be assigned a number, and all Players will be informed of its existence, for voting.
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| If the card is accepted, any Player may type approve number (where "number" is the card number) to accept that card and have it automatically shuffled into the draw pile. If it's rejected, either type repeal number to toss it into the repeal pile, or leave it in the vote pile for someone to amend and repropose.
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| Nomic veterans and those intrigued by the mechanics of democracies may like to propose cards which tinker with the voting process itself. (Establishing yourself as a dictator - denying all other Players a vote - can be a challenge.)
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| ===Amending and Repealing Cards===
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| A Player may, at any time, propose to amend or repeal a card which exists in the deck, but only if that card is in play, in the Discard Pile, or in the Player's own hand.
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| A proposed amendment or repeal is voted upon in the same way that a new card would be.
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| If an amendment is accepted, the card is returned to its previous position in the game. If a card is repealed, it is removed from the deck entirely.
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| Those playing Dvorak on the MUSH Dvorak Engine (or, presumably, Thoth) can propose to amend or repeal any card, since changing a card does not reveal its location in the game.
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| ===Creative Special Rules===
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| Special Rules are created in the same way as cards, and start taking effect immediately, if they are accepted. They can be amended and repealed in the same way as a card in play would be.
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| (Although Special Rules aren't treated as cards whilst in play, there is - of course - nothing to stop the creation of Actions with effects along the lines of "Repeal a Special Rule of your choice.")
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| ===The Aftermath===
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| Once somebody has won the game, or the game has been abandoned through stalemate or boredom, any cards whose proposal was rejected can be reviewed and voted on again - it's often the case that an innocent card was voted down during play simply because someone didn't want it in the deck at the time.
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| Further amendments can also be made to the deck at this point - powerful cards can be toned down, weak cards can be boosted or thrown away, extra copies can be made of cards which need it.
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| When everyone's happy with the deck as it stands, you can either play another game with it (continuing to amend and add cards as you go), file it for future entertainment, or throw it away. The Dvorak deck archive would welcome a copy of the card list, though, if you're at all proud of or amused by it - send a deck listing to deckarchive@dvorakgame.co.uk and we'll put it up for the world to print and play.
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| ==The Variants of Dvorak==
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| ===Team Dvorak===
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| With more three or more players, any Dvorak deck can be played as a Team Game with only minor rule adjustments:-
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| * Any Player may spend an Action to give a card from their hand to one of their Team-mates.
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| * Team-mates are not considered to be Opponents of one another.
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| When a Player wins, his or her Team is victorious. (In games where Players are knocked out, a Team wins if the Players in all other Teams have been eliminated.)
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| ===Multi-Deck Dvorak===
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| Although it's possible to make a normal Dvorak deck where two different 'sides' are in conflict (cf. Day of the Triffids), design is restricted either to blurriness (players aren't forced to pick a side, and can change and mix allegiances as much as they like) or redundancy (players are forced to choose a side at the start of the game, and the other side's cards are useless to them except as discard-fodder).
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| A more effective way to create a game with two or more distinct 'sides' is to have separate decks, each deck focusing solely on that side.
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| Multi-Deck Dvorak is played in the same way as normal Dvorak, except that:-
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| * Each Player has their own draw and discard pile.
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| * When a card is destroyed or discarded, it is sent to the discard Pile of the player whose deck it came from.
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| If playing creatively, new cards are created as normal, going into the creator's deck by default.
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| To avoid their flat rejection, however (Player B is unlikely to be enthusiastic about a card which only Player A can use), several cards may be proposed simultaneously on a tit-for-tat, discussional basis until agreement is reached:-
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| A : "I propose this Xenomorph Egg."
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| B : "Okay..." [scribbles] "I'll let you have it if you approve this Flamethrower."
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| A : "Four damage! Gah. I'll let you have it if I can have an extra Egg."
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| B : "I suppose that's fair enough. Alright then."
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| (Player A gets two Xenomorph Egg cards to shuffle into his deck, Player B gets a Flamethrower for hers.)
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| ===CCG Dvorak=== | | ===CCG Dvorak=== |
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| CCG Dvorak follows the style of collectible deck-building card games such as Magic: The Gathering - a fixed set of cards exists, with each Player creating their own individual deck from copies of those cards. Decks are typically constructed around some thematic idea or a synergistic combination of cards. | | The Dvorak framework has been used to make [[:Category:CCG sets|collectible card games]] - these typically have a lot of special rules, and involve the group creation of a single, agreed card pool from which players can then build their own custom decks. |
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| To create the Card Set, players should spend a while creating and approving at least fifty cards, along with any necessary Special Rules (including restrictions on the construction of decks, if necessary). Alternatively, you can just print out a Card Set from the online archive.
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| Each player then builds their own deck of cards out of copies of cards from the Card Set. Unless otherwise specified by Special Rules, a deck must contain at least twenty cards, and can contain any number of copies of any card.
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| Those using the MUSH Dvorak Engine can build a deck as a text file by simply copying and duplicating the relevant newcard commands from the MUSHcode of the Card Set.
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| Built decks are played against each other as in Multi-Deck Dvorak. Players are free to "tune" their decks between games (removing unwanted cards or inserting copies of other cards from the Card Set), but are not permitted to propose new cards for them, nor to amend existing cards.
| | ===Physical challenges=== |
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| The Card Set itself, however, can be altered at any time, most notably if certain cards are proving to be overly powerful or ambiguous during play. As in standard Dvorak, such changes can only be made if no player objects to them. Any adjustments to the Card Set should be immediately reflected in every player's deck.
| | One Dvorak player has developed some [[Additional Rules - Physical Challenge|Physical Challenge rules]], which define a lot of additional terms for use in games, especially those which involve one or more of the following concepts: Unit, Character, Terrain, Building, Resource, Effect, Attack, Defense, Response, etc. |
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| If a Card Set has been archived online and has attracted interest from players, any significant updates to the Card Set shall be grouped together, where possible, and announced en masse to the mailing list. Card Sets will be given version numbers for ease of reference - if a Player's deck has been built with an earlier version of the Card Set, he or she should check and update it before playing any formal games with it.
| | [[Category:Rules]] |
- The rules to Dvorak are also available in Russian, German, Slovak, Polish and in French.
- An older version of this page is archived here.
This is how a game of Dvorak works. You can either start with a deck of cards that somebody else has made (we've got lots of them archived on this site), or you can start with a pile of blank cards and build a new deck from scratch.
Basic rules
Dvorak is played entirely with cards, and there are just two types of card -
Things and Actions. When you play a Thing card, it goes onto
the table in front of you and stays there, usually having a useful effect
while it remains in play; when you play an Action card, it does whatever it
does and goes to a discard pile.
Take the deck of cards (if you're making up a new game, you need to make these cards first), shuffle it, and deal five cards to each player
(which they hold in their hand where other players can't see). The rest
of the cards go in the middle of the table as a face-down draw pile, and whenever
a card is discarded or destroyed, it goes into a face-up discard pile.
Starting with a random player, you take turns in order. A turn consists
of:-
- Drawing the top card from the draw pile. (If the draw pile's empty, shuffle the discard pile and turn it over to make a new draw pile.)
- Playing up to two cards from your hand. You can play one Thing and one Action per turn (or just one of those, or no cards at all).
- Checking your hand size; if you have more than five cards, discard down to five.
The game continues until somebody meets whatever victory condition the
deck has. (Some decks have fixed victory conditions, while others have
them written on a card - "when you play this card, you win the game if...")
Making a deck
If you're making a new deck from scratch, you need to prepare an initial set cards before the game begins. Take a pile of about forty blank cards (more if you have a lot of players), and distribute it amongst the players.
Before you start creating the cards, decide whether you want to have a theme to the game or not, and whether it needs a fixed victory condition ("If you have five pirates or ninjas in play, and none of the other type, you win!") or one that you can write on one or more of the cards ("If you have more than seven building cards on the table when you play this card, you win.").
Players can then start creating cards, writing them up (with or without a picture) and throwing them into the middle of the table. To get a good sized deck, try to get nine or ten cards from everyone. A useful way to easily distinguish Things from Actions is to have two coloured marker pens, and to underline the card titles in different colours.
Each player has absolute veto power over the cards being created - if you see something that you don't like, for whatever reason, pick the card out and see what everyone else thinks. A card only makes it into the actual game if everyone is happy with it.
When you're done, you've got a deck of cards - you can now play a game with it, as described above.
Adding and changing cards
You can also add new cards to the game while it's being played - again,
just write it up and throw it onto the table. If nobody wants to veto it,
it gets shuffled into the draw pile.
If you want to remove a card from the game or just change the wording of
it (maybe because it's too powerful, or because it clashes ambiguously with
another card), then announce your intention and see what the other players think.
If nobody objects, then you can remove or change the card.
Game structure
Regular players might like to agree on a basic structure for the game, when making a new deck, so that the final game is a bit more honed.
If you agree to restrict the nature of what Things can and can't represent ("absolutely every Thing in this deck is either a monkey, or a piece of food"), or decide what variables like "number of cards in hand" mean in the game world ("cards in hand are analogous to 'money'"), then you'll automatically get more card synergy, and a lot of card juxtapositions that are funny while still making sense. It's also much easier to write cards, if you know roughly what sort of stuff is going to be out there, and agreeing on clear subtypes for Things lets you make cards that only affect those things.
Advanced rules
Over the years, the game has developed a few extra, optional rules to cover the sorts of mechanics that tend to come up a lot. Adopt or adapt them if they seem useful.
Jargon
A lot of the archived Dvorak decks use consistent terminology like "discard" and "destroy", which allow cards to be written more concisely. It's easier to say "opponent discards a card" instead of "a player other than you discards a card from their hand", if everybody knows what "opponent" and "discard" mean.
You're encouraged to make up your own jargon, but there's a glossary of the terms we tend to use on the site.
Special rules
"Special rules" are additions to the basic game rules to give the game a bit more depth. Rules like "each player starts with twenty hit points and you're out of the game at zero", so that people can make cards that say "every player loses 5 hit points" or "you gain 10 hit points" without having to define what hit points are on every card.
If you want to add a special rule to the game, suggest it in the same way as a card - if everyone's in favour, it gets added.
Action abilities
One of the early Dvorak decks included a Thing that said "Each turn, instead of playing an Action card, you may destroy a Thing." - the player who controlled it could skip playing an Action card during a turn, to trigger a special effect from the Thing.
This became so widely used that a shorthand developed for it. Instead of writing "Each turn, instead of playing an Action card...", a card would just say "Action:" - whatever's after the colon is what you get to do instead of playing an Action card from your hand.
This is called an "action ability", and still counts as an Action for the purposes any other cards that affect or react to Actions being played.
Playing cards onto other cards
If you like, you can specify that some Thing cards can be played "onto"
other Thing cards to give them some sort of bonus or penalty (like armour,
or equipment, or a brain-sucking alien). A useful rule for these is that
if the Thing it was played onto is destroyed or otherwise leaves play,
the Thing that was played onto it is destroyed.
Variants
Multi-deck Dvorak
Although it's possible to make a normal Dvorak deck where two different
'sides' are in conflict (as in the Day of the Triffids deck), such
games either have to be vague (players aren't forced to pick a side, and
can change and mix allegiances as much as they like) or include
redundancy (players are forced to choose a side at the start of the
game, and the other side's cards are useless to them except as
discard-fodder).
A more effective way to create such a game is to have separate decks,
each deck focusing solely on that side.
Multi-deck Dvorak is played in the same way as normal Dvorak, except
that:
- Each player has their own draw and discard pile.
- When a card is destroyed or discarded, it is sent to the discard pile of the player whose deck it came from.
If playing creatively, new cards are created as normal, going into the
creator's deck by default. You can still veto other player's cards, but
in this case it might be more useful to resolve disputes by creating a
similar card for your own deck - "if you can have something that destroys
all my aliens, I'm going to have something that makes you discard your
entire hand".
CCG Dvorak
The Dvorak framework has been used to make collectible card games - these typically have a lot of special rules, and involve the group creation of a single, agreed card pool from which players can then build their own custom decks.
Physical challenges
One Dvorak player has developed some Physical Challenge rules, which define a lot of additional terms for use in games, especially those which involve one or more of the following concepts: Unit, Character, Terrain, Building, Resource, Effect, Attack, Defense, Response, etc.