Zagami
In 1962, on a quiet October afternoon in the middle of an African cornfield, a 40-pound meteorite tumbled to the earth and planted itself
in a two-foot hole in the ground. It landed ten feet away from a farmer, who was busy scaring crows away from
his corn and so was not on the lookout for falling meteorites. The papers reported that the pressure wave from
the impact knocked him flat on his back.
What the papers failed to report was that, immediately after the impact, a tiny Martian lifeform hopped off the
smoldering rock and made its way, quietly, toward the dazed farmer. The changes that overtook him during the
following weeks and months were slow and subtle to the eye. It was a long while before he, or anyone else,
understood what he'd become.
But that's a different story. This is the story of that 40-pound meteorite, and the colonies of Martian
microbes which lived upon it, struggling to survive on their journey through the cold depths of space between
Mars and Earth. Only a strong colony—the strongest of them all—could have survived such a journey. And, no
matter what planet you're from, there's only one way to become the strongest. It's the ancient way; the
evolutionary way. The natural way.
Eat everyone else.
What You Need
Setup
Each player should select a color. Set up the board as shown to the right, using four medium pieces of each
color. Put the unused pieces of your color near you, creating your off-board "stash". This stash should be
visible to all players at all times during the game. Also, keep a space clear near the board in front of you, to
be used as your "enzyme area". It should also be visible to all players at all times. Select a starting player
using any method desired; play moves clockwise around the board.
Play
On your turn, do the following:
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Chose any one of your pieces to be the active microbe for this turn.
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Move the active microbe. (Optional)
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Eat the piece directly below the active microbe. (Optional)
When you choose to eat, do the following:
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Replace the eaten piece with a piece that's exactly one size smaller. The smaller piece may come from that
player's stash, or from your own enzyme area.
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Put the eaten piece somewhere in your own enzyme area.
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Use the power of your strongest enzyme of that color. (Optional)
You are also allowed to simply pass and do nothing on your turn.
Moving
Small pieces can move one space, mediums two spaces, and large pieces three spaces. You don't have to move the
maximum distance, and movement is always optional. Each step of a movement must be in one of the four orthogonal
directions, and each step may be in a different direction than the last. If your piece has any pieces on top of
it, they are all carried along with it, regardless of the sizes of any of the pieces. You may always move
through or land on any space, regardless of what's in that space. If there's already a stack of pieces in the
destination space, your moving piece (along with any pieces being carried by it) goes on top of that stack.
Eating
After (optionally) moving your active microbe, you may eat the piece which is directly below it. You are
not allowed to eat pieces of your own color. Whenever you eat a piece, you must shrink it by exactly one size
(unless its a small piece, in which case you simply remove it from the board). When you shrink a piece, the
smaller piece may come from that opponent's stash or from your own enzyme area (you may choose which). If
neither of these options is available, the piece you're trying to eat is currently "indigestible". No matter
where you choose to take the smaller piece from, you must put the larger piece somewhere in your enzyme
area (see below).
You may use any size piece to eat any size piece; for instance, you may use one of your small pieces to eat a
large piece (which becomes a medium piece). You are allowed to eat even when your piece has other pieces on top
of it, but remember that your piece may only eat the piece which is directly below it.
Enzymes
Over the course of the game, you'll evolve a growing number of "enzymes" in your enzyme area. A single enzyme is
represented by a stack of one, two, or three pieces; each enzyme may only contain pieces of a single color, and
at most a single piece of each size. The strength of an enzyme is determined by the number of pieces it
contains. (In order to make the strength of an enzyme easy to see, always stack smaller pieces on larger
pieces.) The function of an enzyme is determined by its orientation. An enzyme stack may stand upright on
its base, or it may lie on its side and point towards the board, away from the board, or sideways (making a
total of four possible orientations).
Whenever you shrink an opponent's piece, you must add the larger piece to your enzyme area. You may always
choose to create a new enzyme, in which case you simply place the piece in one of the four orientations.
Alternatively, you may add it to one of your pre-existing enzymes of the same color (as long as that enzyme
doesn't already contain a piece of the same size). You may not change the orientation of an enzyme once it's
been created. When you shrink the piece that you're eating, if you choose to take the smaller piece from your
enzyme area rather than from the opponent's stash, you don't have to add the larger piece to the same enzyme
that the smaller piece was just in; you can add it to any enzyme of that color (as long as there's no size
conflict), or use it to create a new enzyme. There's no limit to the number of enzymes you're allowed to create
for a color, and you may duplicate orientations if you wish.
Enzyme Actions
After you eat an opponent's piece and add it to your enzyme area, you are immediately allowed to use your
strongest enzyme of that color. (Your strongest enzyme is the one that contains the most pieces.) If there's
a tie for the strongest enzyme, you aren't allowed to use any enzyme on this turn. An enzyme action is always
optional, and you don't have to use its full strength. The four possible enzyme actions are:
Spore—This action is represented by an enzyme stack that's lying down and pointing towards yourself.
Whenever you use the power of this enzyme, you're allowed to add one, two, or three of your own small pieces to
the board (based on the strength of your enzyme). You may place these pieces in any of the four spaces adjacent
to the active microbe's stack (and on top of whatever pieces are already there). When creating multiple pieces,
you may distribute them in any way that you'd like, including stacked on top of each other.
Grow—This action is represented by an enzyme stack that's standing up on its base. Whenever you use the
power of this enzyme, you're given one, two, or three units of growth (based on the strength of your enzyme).
For each unit of growth, you may increase the size of any one of your pieces in the active microbe's
stack, by swapping the piece with the next-larger piece from your stash. You may use two units of growth to
grow a small piece into a large one, even if you have no medium pieces available in your stash.
Attack—This action is represented by an enzyme stack that's lying down and pointing towards the board.
Whenever you use the power of this enzyme, you're allowed to perform one, two, or three attacks (based on the
size of the enzyme). For each attack, you may remove any piece from the active microbe's stack, and return it to
its owner's stash.
Escape—This action is represented by an enzyme stack that's lying down and pointing to either side (it
doesn't matter which). Whenever you use the power of this enzyme, you're allowed to perform one, two, or three
escapes (based on the size of the enzyme). For each escape, you may remove any one of your pieces from the
active microbe's stack, and move it to any space on the board (on top of anything that's already there).
Escaping pieces never carry other pieces on top of them. You may only escape pieces from the stack that the
active microbe started in, even if the active microbe itself escapes to a different stack. You are
allowed to put escaping pieces on top of the stack they escaped from.
Elimination and Winning
If, at the end of any player's turn, you have no pieces left on the board, you are eliminated from the game; all
of the pieces in your enzyme area are returned to their respective stashes. The game continues until there is
only one player left alive; that player is the winner. It's possible to reach a stalemate position; in that
case, all players remaining in the game share the win.
After you've won, you are allowed to stand up, throw your hands in the air, spin around, and shout "Zagami!" in
a loud voice. This action is always optional. Of course.
Acknowledgments
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Game Design—Kory Heath and John Cooper
- Game
Development—Jacob Davenport, Kristin Matherly, Andy Looney
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Playtesting—Peter Hammond, Leo D. P.
Further Reading
Links