8.15.0.6

The Bazaar Game🔗

Matthias Felleisen

image

The game is inspired by Bazaar; the actual game may help develop some intuition but the physical game and the implementation differ in many ways.

Most of the time when we discuss ideas, the words “referee”, “player”, and so on refer to software components not people. To remind you of their inanimate nature, it is best to use “its” or “it”—as in “its game pieces” or “it’s taking its turn.”.

Informal Overview

The Bazaar game is a trading game for 2 to 6 players. The playing field is made up of two items:

Players own “pebbles,” a form of currency and keep them hidden from other players. With these pebbles they can acquire the displayed cards; each purchase yields a number of points depending on what the card displays and on how many pebbles the player has left. Once a card is purchased, it is replaced with another one. Players can also exchange (some of) their pebbles with a bank according to the displayed equations.

The player with the highest total score wins when the game is over.

Game Pieces

Our version of the game comes with pebbles of the following colors: red, white, blue, green, yellow.

image image image image image

There are 100 pebbles overall, an equal number of each kind.

A card displays five images of such pebbles, arranged in a circular manner, optionally decorated with a happy face in the center.

image image

There are 20 cards overall.

An equation shows two collections of pebbles on the sides of an = sign; each side has at least one and at most 4 pebbles. The two sides must not contain pebbles of the same color.

image

image

There are 10 equations overall.

Setting up the Game

The referee picks generates 10 equations at random and makes them available to the players. It also puts four cards on the playing field, again visible to all players. Finally, it endows its bank with all of the colored pebbles. That’s it.

Playing a Turn

A player’s turn can proceed in one of three ways:

Any legal exchange request comes with a price, no matter how many equations it uses. Per such request, the referee immediately removes the bottom-most card from the pile of invisible ones or, if this pile is empty, it removes all visible cards, thus ending the game.

After a player’s turn is over, the referee replaces the acquired cards, if any, with fresh ones, if any are remaining, and grants the next player a turn.

The referee eliminates any player that violates any rules during a turn. Elimination means that the player’s pebbles disappear from the game.

Scoring a Turn A player receives points after buying a card.

pebbles left

     

points per plain card

     

... card with face

3 or more

     

1

     

2

2

     

2

     

3

1

     

3

     

5

0

     

5

     

8

The referee keeps track of the scores on a per turn basis. The scores of all players are visible.

Ending a Game

The game ends if
  • all players have been kicked at the end of a player’s turn;

  • a player has 20 or more points at the end of its turn;

  • no more cards are available for purchase; or

  • the bank is empty and no player can buy a card.

Technically, this means that a game may never end if the players pursue strategies of not trading pebbles or not buying a sufficient number of cards. If this ever happens, we will modify these instructions to avoid this problem in the future.