Conquest of Paradise

Empire Building in Polynesia, 500 A.D.

 
The Time: Circa 500 A.D. 
The Place: The first islands of a new culture, later to be known as Polynesia. 
The Situation: You lead a tribe looking to expand its influence throughout the South Pacific. 
Conquest of Paradise is a game of empire building in the "Polynesian Triangle" 
of the central Pacific Ocean for two, three, or four players. Players explore the unknown ocean 
around them, hoping to discover the most lucrative island groups, and colonize them. They build 
canoes and train warriors to create a force to defend their empire, while forging lines of communication 
with their developing discoveries. Resources are scarce; using them wisely is a key to victory. 
Investing in exploration widens your empire. Building warriors strengthens your empire. 
Investing resources into cultural innovations can yield unexpected dividends, 
like tattooing, hula dancing, surfing, or even the giant moai statues of Easter Island fame. 
Previously announced by Phalanx Games (but later returned to the designer when 
they changed the direction of their game line), Conquest of Paradise is a well-tested, fast-
playing design geared to appeal to players who enjoy games like New World, 
Civilization, and Conquistador. You can learn the game in 10-15 minutes and finish a 
complete game in 60-90 minutes. 
Conquest of Paradise is a game of exploration and empire building, but also (as you'd 
expect from a GMT game) CONFLICT. Choosing when to build those expensive 
warriors, and when and where to fight, given limited resources, is key to your success. 

Game Components
One 34" x 22" color game map of the Pacific Ocean, spanning from Australia to America
176 colorful 5/8" game pieces depicting Polynesian warriors, canoes, and colonists
140 additional 1/2" game markers, representing Polynesian villages, intensive agriculture, and discovered islands
 28 Discovery Tiles, depicting Polynesian island groups
 27 illustrated cultural innovations cards
 One player's manual with examples of play, advanced rules, player's notes, designer's notes, historic references, and just four pages of rules
Two player reference cards
 Four six-sided dice

Designed by Kevin McPartland 

Also designed by Kevin McPartland Maori Cannibals at War

Retail Price:
21,00 €
Max. Discount Price:
16,80 €
Preis inkl. MwSt, zzgl. Porto in Abhängigkeit von Bestellmenge und Versandadresse.
(This sentence must be here for reasons of german bureaucracy.)