Battleship
"B-11". "nah!" "A-3"
"D'oh . . . You sunk my battleship!".
In this "classic naval combat game" the open seas were cluttered
with ships of war, five on each side. But unlike real war, these
nautical enemies decided to play fair, standing perfectly still and
taking turns firing missiles at each other.
Battleship was a hit and miss game of strategy, combining lucky
guesswork with deductive reasoning to sink the enemy fleet and rule as
master of the waters.
Two flip-up game boards kept your fleet's location hidden from the
enemy, and vice versa. On a 10x10 grid (labeled A-J vertically, 1-10
horizontally), players arranged the five members of their fleet -
Aircraft Carrier, Battleship, Submarine, Destroyer, and Patrol Boat -
on either horizontal or vertical rows (and no, you little cheaters,
the pegs wouldn't let them fit in diagonally!). Once the opposing
fleets were arranged, the firing commenced.
Taking turns, players yelled out coordinates like Bingo-callers ("H-7"
"C-3"), hoping to score a lucky hit on one of the enemy craft. To keep
track of the misses (and there were usually many), players stuck white
pegs in a matching grid on the flipped-up top of the game board (red
pegs noted the hits). But even after that lucky first strike, the
guesswork wasn't over - was that the 5-space carrier or the 2-space
patrol boat, and is the rest of that tender hull laying north, south,
east or west of here? Bad guesses meant more misses, and that gave the
enemy more time to hunt your own craft down and blow them out of the
water.
Battleship caught on quickly in a Cold War world, and the game
eventually expanded into several forms. Electronic Battleship took
some of the manual labor out of the game, replacing it with nifty
sound effects. Things went a step further in Electronic Talking
Battleship, which barked out commands and results to its opposing
naval officers. The game even took on outside licenses, resulting in customized
versions with Star Wars spaceships and other craft.
The 90s found Battleship moving into the CD-ROM world with added
features and new forms of gameplay. Back in the physical world,
Electronic Battleship: Advanced Mission gave the original board game a
few new tweaks of its own (torpedoes, reconnaissance aircraft, voice
recognition, etc.), but even with all the advanced versions on the
market, the original Battleship remains a favorite of gamers, more
than earning its status as a board game classic.
Vincent Price starred in the classic US TV commercial as a a teller
in an old-fashioned bank where they are so involved in the game that
they ignore all the customers (like that would ever happen!!).
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