Carcassonne Central
Carc Central Community => Official Rules => Topic started by: Guy on March 13, 2015, 06:54:31 AM
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Is there a clarification about Barn placement using to Halfling tiles? If they count as a whole tile I don't see a problem as long as there's no feature touching that edge e.g the ccc halfling tile.
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Is there a clarification about Barn placement using to Halfling tiles? If they count as a whole tile I don't see a problem as long as there's no feature touching that edge e.g the ccc halfling tile.
No clarification about it yet.
I've splitt this, because this question was not a part of my telephone call yesterday.
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The Halflings: Half the size, but twice as many questions!
:)
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I think it should be valid. Same goes to, when you complete a city, completely surrounded by walls, but with a triangular CCC hole inside, it should be considered completed, according to the "full tile status" of a halfling. (Also meaning, that if somebody later in the game places the fitting CCC inside, he or she can not place a meeple, because the building had been finished and probably, but not necessarily, scored before.) Nevertheless, this might be something, which as well should be officially clarified.
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what is a ccc tile? :o
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c = city
r = road
f = field
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c = city
r = road
f = field
Aaaaah... Now I get it. :) Thanx! ^-^ :(y)
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I think it should be valid. Same goes to, when you complete a city, completely surrounded by walls, but with a triangular CCC hole inside, it should be considered completed, according to the "full tile status" of a halfling. (Also meaning, that if somebody later in the game places the fitting CCC inside, he or she can not place a meeple, because the building had been finished and probably, but not necessarily, scored before.) Nevertheless, this might be something, which as well should be officially clarified.
According to the CAR page on halflings, 3.Scoring a feature, Roads and cities: “As per the base game rules, completed cities cannot contain gaps. In this case, this means they cannot contain square or triangular gaps.”