Galactic Conflict Explained

Galactic Conflict
Designer:Chuck Gaydos
Publisher:Flying Buffalo Inc., Rick Loomis PBM Games
Genre:space, play-by-mail
Language:English
Players:6 to 15
Playing Time:Fixed
Materials:Instructions, order sheets, turn results, paper, pencil
Media Type:Play-by-mail or email
Website:http://www.rickloomispbm.com/galactic.html

Galactic Conflict is a space-based, computer-moderated, play-by-mail game originally published by Flying Buffalo in 1982. As August 2021, Rick Loomis PBM Games took over as game publisher. During gameplay, six to fifteen players expand across the galaxy, building industrial capacity and pursuing Civilian Projects through various means. Some player diplomacy is typical. The game received multiple reviews in the early 1980s, receiving generally positive comments.

Development

Rick Loomis announced the publication of Galactic Conflict in the November 1982 issue of The Space Gamer magazine.[1] Chuck Gaydos is the designer.[1] The game is still available for play in the 21st century. After the August 4, 2021 sale of Flying Buffalo Inc. to Webbed Sphere,[2] the PBM games—which were not included in the sale—continued under a new company: Rick Loomis PBM Games.[3] The company, run by Loomis' sisters and their PBM computer expert, continues to offer Galactic Conflict as of August 2021.[3] [4]

Gameplay

Galactic Conflict is a play-by-mail computer-moderated game in which players win by having accumulated the most points when the game ends. Game lengths are fixed, with the duration determined secretly at the outset. In each game, six to fifteen players expand across the galaxy from a single planet, building industrial capacity to pursue Civilian Projects. Players can build projects, defend them, and attack other players to win them.[5] There is some player diplomacy involved in gameplay.[5]

Reception

In the April 1983 edition of Dragon, Michael Gray stated "the player is constantly faced with the decision to build more forces and defenses or to build ECONs and thereby gain more points. This also looks like an easy game for beginners."[6] W.G. Armintrout reviewed Galactic Conflict in the May–June 1983 issue of The Space Gamer.[7] Armintrout commented that "Galactic Conflict is a homely but elegant game of science fiction conquest. There is a masterful blend of options in production, military campaigning and logistically structuring an empire. I give it my highest recommendation – particularly for those who have never played PBM before."[7]

See also

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. [#Loo82e|Loomis 1982]
  2. [#FBI21|Flying Buffalo Inc. 2021]
  3. [#Cro21|Crompton 2021]
  4. [#Loo21a|Rick Loomis PBM Games 2021]
  5. [#PBM21|Rick Loomis PBM Games 2021]
  6. [#Gra83|Gray 1983]
  7. [#Arm83|Armintrout 1983]