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HIGH FORM RULES

High form is currently only implemented as a two-player game on BGA.

Terminology

Pieces are ranked in order: common, heroic, legendary. Upgrade and downgrade mean changing the rank of a piece. A higher ranked piece may count (for summoning or tasks) as if it were of lower rank.

A move is one square in any direction (including diagonals). A leap is from any square to any other. A standard move/leap is permitted onto any empty square or one occupied by a piece of a lesser rank. A combat move/leap is permitted onto any empty square or one occupied by a piece of the same or lesser rank.

Any piece previously occupying the destination square of a move/leap is destroyed. You may destroy your own pieces.

Setup

Each player receives 3 cards from their personal deck, plus 2 Legendary Beings and one flare from the common decks. Four cards are drawn for the task queue. The first three are immediately available; the fourth is not yet available. Three tasks of the same type may not be active at once (BGA automatically enforces this rule).

Turns

The starting player takes a single action. In subsequent turns, each player takes two of the following actions per turn:

  • - Place a common piece on any empty square
  • - Summon a being
  • - Discard a card and (optionally) return other cards to their decks

In addition, before or after any action, a flare may be played, if one or both of its conditions are met.

Once a turn is over:

  • - You may claim one task card and earn its victory points (VPs) if you meet its conditions.
  • - If necessary, replenish your hand from the appropriate decks and update the task queue. (Automated on BGA.)

Playing a Flare

Each flare lists two numbers: X/Y. The top effect may be activated if a player has X fewer upgraded pieces on the board than their opponent; the bottom effect if they have Y fewer pieces in total on the board. Effects activate in top-to-bottom order.

Summoning

If your pieces are in the formation on a Being’s card (in any orientation or mirror image), you may summon the piece in the top left corner, via a combat leap onto the white square in the pattern. For most beings, the white square is empty, but some require a piece of your own to be present in the square. Once the Being is summoned, the effects listed on its card are activated.

Patterns for Legendary Beings require one or more heroic pieces. Each legendary piece on the board earns 1 VP. Each player can place a maximum of 3 legendary pieces on the board. If one is destroyed, 1 VP is lost.

Discarding

Once per turn a player may discard a card. They may also return as many other cards as they like (regular cards, legends, flares) to the bottom of the appropriate decks. Once the turn is over, they replenish their hand as usual.

Running Out of Pieces

If a player needs to place a piece and has no more in stock, they must pick up one from the board before placing the new piece. (Heroic and common pieces come from the same pool--in the original boardgame, they are reverse sides of the same piece--but there are only three legendary pieces for each colour.)

Game End and Scoring

When one player scores 9 VPs or draws the last card from their own deck, game end is triggered. Everyone plays one more turn, including the player who triggered endgame. Even if their score decreases below 9 due to destruction of a legendary piece, the game still ends.

High score wins. Tiebreakers are, in order, (1) number of heroic pieces; (2) total number of pieces.

DEATHMATCH RULES: TWO PLAYERS (DUEL)

No tasks are used. Opening positions are marked on the game board. The first player to score 18 VPs triggers the endgame.

Destroying pieces scores VPs as follows:

  • - 1 VP for every 2 common pieces, rounded down
  • - 1 VP for a heroic piece
  • - 2 VPs for a legendary piece

Summoning a legend scores 1 VP. This VP is not lost if the piece is later destroyed.

If you play a flare your opponent gains 1 VP.

DEATHMATCH RULES: THREE OR FOUR PLAYERS

Scores are tracked separately in each colour. Your final score is the lowest of these scores. (The second and, in 4-player games, third lowest scores are used as tiebreakers.)

When you score common pieces, first all common colour pairs are scored; then, if two common pieces of different colours remain, you may choose which colour to score against.

When you summon a legend, you may choose which opponent to score 1 VP against.

You may meet one or both criteria for a flare against multiple opponents, in which case you may choose whom to trigger it against (and give them 1 VP).

Endgame is triggered by a player scoring 12 (for three-player) or 10 (for four-player) VPs in a single colour.

Improvised Summoning

Once per game, and once for each opponent's colour, a player may use an opponent's piece as their own when summoning a Being. (Thus in a 3-player game, a player may perform two improvised summonings; in a 4-player game, three--one for each opponent's colour.) Only one piece may be used per improvised summoning: you may not use two different opponent's pieces simultaneously.

EVERFROST EXPANSION

Several Beings in the Everfrost deck have "frozen effects". These effects do not have to take place immediately upon summoning; they can be activated later ("thawed"), like a flare. Only one such frozen effect may be stored at a time; if you summon a Being with a frozen effect and already have one in storage, you must discard one or the other frozen effect.