@Brain:
Also, bump.
Why do I see people posting “bump”? What does that mean?
It’s essentially an empty post that attempts to bring the thread back to the first page of the list
Thanks for your help a +1 to you
At the risk of sounding old & nostolgic, I just wanted to post about how great the Classic A&A is. To this day I pull it out & wage war with it. I enjoy how straightforward, and dare I say, simplistic the game is. Yet, it is amazingly diverse in strategies. It is also by far the easiest to teach to a new player, who then can expand to the other variants of the game. I also praise the durability of the game. I have owned my copy for over 7 years without a single broken/missing piece! So those are my thoughts. You are more than welcome to share your opinions.
simplistic??? Honestly, I find A&A anything but simplistic… If you play without bid it might be simplistic because the Allies will always win, other than that I think it is not simplistic at all. I also have the problem teaching new players, because you kick their behinds so hard that most of the time they don’t like playing it a second time :P Just because the basic tactics are hard to understand as a new player…
When I said the game was simplistic, I was meant that each nation’s pieces worked exactly the same. There aren’t any National advantages, or special abilities that one nation has & the others don’t (Japanese Destroyers in AAP for example). I maintain though that Classic is the easiest to introduce on new players.
It is also simplistic in the fact it has limited territories compared to the other flavors.
You really only have one route to Berlin with Russia, through E. Europe. There is no other direct path!
You really only have one route to Moscow with Germany, through Karelia. You can go through Caucasus, but it’s generally easier to go through Karelia
Africa is hella simple, no Sahara to run around, therefore no bottleneck in Egypt, etc.
And the Allies don’t always win, neither do new players always get crushed…regardless of what has been said
Ive been playing since i was 10, now 24, classic version is still my favorite from the releases. Mostly play UK and pretty sure ive mastered them at this point, probably got about 300+ games exp. Its just one of those things you can do with friends every week likes cards but play A&A instead and have alot of fun
Amen Quiggley. I used to have the classic board memorized. It’s simple enough that it can almost be played as casually as Risk. No only that it was just plain fun.
i seriously haven’t dug my original game out until a few nights ago. the pieces were scattered to hell, so i re-organised the entire thing. still have all the parts, amazing
although unless i was teaching a new player the ropes, i probably wouldn’t set it up. i kind of grew up with A&A, so as i’ve aged, new versions have come out. a game on the original would feel too quick and simple! :-D
simplistic??? Honestly, I find A&A anything but simplistic…
Compared to an average wargame, Axis and Allies is very simplistic… but simplistic does not mean bad.
I play Axis and Allies more than any of my other wargames because of that very fact.
I can teach a new person Axis and Allies in an hour - I can’t teach them a wargame in an hour - hell, it took me months to learn GMT’s A World at War which is the antithesis of Axis and Allies.
Interesting note on playing the classic version.
We just played a game tonight with my wife, 14 year old and 10 year old. We were playing on an A&A game that I had for several years before I got married. I’ve been married 18 years so I’m thinking this game must be 20+ years old. It was originally published in 1981, according to board game geek and my rule set is a Milton Bradley version with a 1986 copyright. I played A&A in high school and have had the game ever since. My wife doesn’t like to play but my kids are old enough to get involved.
Oh, and I stomped them as axis. hehe. But, using it to teach the game. We are also working our way through the World at War DVD series to teach them about WWII. Using A&A to show how things went.
A classic game that never goes out of style.
Classic A&A is without a doubt the most fun game I grew up with as a kid, I would not trade a single game of A&A that iv’e played for anything. Truly the memories of gathering around the table with my friends and playing for hours are worth more than any mountain of gold. How any game Avalon has released since can hope to compare I have no idea. Don’t get me wrong I enjoy the new games very much, but they just don’t have the same magic as the original A&A does.
My original copy is still intact and holds a proud place in my collection.
And the Allies don’t always win, neither do new players always get crushed…regardless of what has been said
In a no bid game, the allies WILL always win!(given that both players have equal skills) And a new player WILL always lose vs an experienced player, does not matter if he plays Axis or Allies.