Catan: Cities & Knight Expansion
Product Details
- Players: 3-4
- Playing Time: 90> Min
- Age: 12+
- Mechanisms: Dice Rolling, Hexagonal Grid, Income, Moduar Board, Network and Route Building, Random Production, Race, Trading, Variable Setup
- Designer: Klaus Teuber
- Contents: 36 Commodity Cards, 54 Progress Cards, 6 Victory Point Cards, 3 Wooden Metropolis Tokens, 1 Wooden Merchant Figure, 1 Customer Event Die, 1 Wooden Barbarian Ship, 24 Wooden Knight Cards, 12 City Walls, 4 Development Flip-charts, 1 Tile to track barbarian fleet, Rules & Almanac
Description
Flourishing trade brings prosperity to Catan. However, all this wealth also attracts barbarians. The knights of Catan are needed! The expansion can also be combined with CATAN - Seafarers and CATAN - Traders & Barbarians.
What is this about?
Use the hexes of the CATAN base game to assemble Catan inside the provided frame. Each player has just finished building a settlement and a city, when dark clouds gather over the peaceful island of Catan. Wild barbarians, attracted by the wealth of Catan, sail toward the island's shores. There is still enough time to prepare for confronting the intruders, though. The strength of the hostile barbarian army always corresponds to the number of cities on Catan. In order to successfully defend Catan, the knights of all players combined must be at least as strong as the barbarian army.
Knights are not used in the form of cards; instead, they are represented by wooden tokens that are placed on unoccupied intersections.Each token has an “active” side depicting a knight helmet in colour and an “inactive” side depicting a black-and-white knight helmet. A knight can only fight after he is activated; activation costs one grain. After paying the grain, you turn the knight token over so that its active side is face up. Each ring on the token counts as one strength point.
If the knights of all players combined have enough strength points to defeat the barbarian army, the danger is averted for the moment. However, if the Catanian knights are too weak, a city will be raided and downgraded to a settlement.
This unfortunate event always affects the player who had the lowest total strength of active knights when the barbarians attacked. Besides defending Catan, knights can also be used to chase away the robber or to displace another player’s knight.
When you are not busy defending Catan, you are competing for the metropolises, which represent two additional victory points. In order to establish a metropolis (which is placed on top of a city), you first need to improve your cities.
The construction of city buildings, such as the Library, Market, Abbey, or Town Hall, is indicated on development flip-charts
You pay for city improvements with commodities such as coins, cloth, or books. How do you get commodities? Instead of two resources, cities adjacent to mountains, pasture, and forest hexes produce only one resource but also one commodity derived from the respective type of resource.
With increasing city improvements, the odds to obtain new progress cards become more favourable. Cards such as “Mining,” “Irrigation,” or “Building Crane” allow for faster settlement activities. Cards such as “Merchant,” “Merchant Fleet,” “Trade Monopoly,” or “Resource Monopoly” create advantages with regards to trade. On the other hand, you can bother stronger players with cards such as the “Deserter,” “Spy,” or “Diplomat.”
Get used to a tougher life on Catan – and a longer but also more exciting game. The first player to reach 13 victory points is the winner.