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Stratego

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Stratego
Two games of Stratego in session
PublishersJumbo Games
Years active1946–present
GenresBoard game
Strategy game
War game
Players2
Setup time1 to 5 minutes
Playing time10 minutes to 1.5 hours
ChanceNone
Age range8+
SkillsStrategy, tactics, memory, bluff

Stratego (/strəˈtɡ/ strə-TEE-goh) is a strategy board game for two players on a board of 10×10 squares. Each player controls 40 pieces representing individual officer and soldier ranks in an army. The pieces have Napoleonic insignia. The objective of the game is to either find and capture the opponent's Flag or to capture so many enemy pieces that the opponent cannot make any further moves. Stratego has simple enough rules for young children to play but a depth of strategy that is also appealing to adults.

The game is a slightly modified copy of an early 20th century French game named L'Attaque ("The Attack"), and has been in production in Europe since World War II and the United States since 1961. There are now two- and four-player versions, versions with 10, 30 or 40 pieces per player, and boards with smaller sizes (number of spaces). There are also variant pieces and different rulesets.

The International Stratego Federation, the game's governing body, sponsors an annual Stratego World Championship.

Name and trademark

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Stratego is from the French or Greek strategos (var. strategus) for leader of an ancient (especially Greek) army:[1] first general.[2]

The name Stratego was first registered in 1942 in the Netherlands. The United States trademark was filed in 1958 and registered in 1960 to Jacques Johan Mogendorff and is presently owned by Jumbo Games as successors to Hausemann and Hotte, headquartered in the Netherlands. It has been licensed to manufacturers such as Milton Bradley, Hasbro and others, as well as retailers such as Barnes & Noble, Target stores, etc.

The contents of the game

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  A B C D E F G H I J
10
9
8
7
6    
5
4
3
2
1

This description is of the original and classic games; many variant shapes and colors of pieces and boards have been produced in the decades since.

The game box contents are a set of 40 gold-embossed red playing pieces, a set of silver-embossed blue playing pieces, and a folding 15+12 in × 18+12 in (39 cm × 47 cm) rectangular cardboard playing board imprinted with a 10×10 grid of spaces. The early sets featured painted wood pieces, later sets colored plastic. The pieces are small and roughly rectangular, 1 in (25 mm) tall and 34 in (19 mm) wide, and unweighted.[3] More modern versions first introduced in Europe have cylindrical castle-shaped pieces. Some versions have a cardboard privacy screen to assist setup. A few versions have wooden boxes or boards.

Setup

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Typically, color is chosen by lot: one player uses red pieces, and the other uses blue pieces. Before the start of the game, players arrange their 40 pieces in a 4×10 configuration at either end of the board. The ranks are printed on one side only and placed so that the players cannot identify the opponent's pieces. Players may not place pieces in the lakes or the 12 squares in the center of the board. Such pre-play distinguishes the fundamental strategy of particular players and influences the outcome of the game. Typically, red plays first.

Gameplay

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Computer software version of Stratego

Players alternate moving; red moves first. The right to move first does not significantly affect game play (unlike chess). Each player moves one piece per turn. In the original rules, a player may move or strike, but not both.[4]: Movement, 11  A player must move a piece in their turn; there is no "pass."

Two zones in the middle of the board, each 2×2, cannot be entered by either player's pieces at any time. They are shown as lakes on the battlefield and serve as choke points to make frontal assaults less direct.

The game can be won by capturing the opponent's Flag or all of their moveable pieces. It is possible to have ranked pieces that are not moveable because they are trapped behind bombs. In unusual cases, it is possible to draw, for example, when both players' flags are protected by bombs and each player has one remaining piece which is not a miner.

The average game has 381 moves. The number of legal positions is 10115. The number of possible games is 10535.[5] Stratego has many more moves and possible board states than other familiar games such as chess and backgammon; however, unlike those games where a single bad move at any point may result in loss of the game, most moves in Stratego are inconsequential as players think in "games not moves" (Boer, 2007[6]).

Rules of movement

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All movable pieces, with the exception of the Scout, may move only one step to any adjacent space vertically or horizontally (but not diagonally).[4]: Movement:2  A piece may not move onto a space occupied by a like-color piece.[4]: Movement:4, 5  Bomb and Flag pieces are not moveable.[4]: Movement:7  The Scout may move any number of spaces in a straight line (such as the rook in chess).[4]: Movement:8  In the older versions of Stratego the Scout could not move and strike in the same turn;[4]: Movement:8 [7] in newer versions this was allowed.[8] Even before that, sanctioned play usually amended the original Scout movement to allow moving and striking in the same turn because it facilitates gameplay.

No piece can move back and forth between the same two spaces for more than three consecutive turns (two square rule).[4]: Movement:10 

When a player wants to attack, they "strike" by touching an opposing piece with their piece or by moving it onto the square the opposing piece occupies. Both players then reveal their piece's rank; the weaker piece (see exceptions below) is removed from the board.[4]: Attack:5  If the engaging pieces are of equal rank, both are removed.[4]: Attack:7  A piece may not move onto a square already occupied unless it attacks. The original rules also contained a provision that following a strike, the winning piece immediately occupies the space vacated by the losing piece.[a][4]: Attack:6 

Two pieces have special attack powers. One special piece is the Bomb which only Miners can defuse. It immediately eliminates any other piece striking it without being destroyed itself.[4]: Attack:10  Each player also has one Spy, which succeeds only if it attacks the Marshal or the Flag. If the Spy attacks any other piece, or is attacked by any piece (including the Marshal), the Spy is defeated.[4]: Attack:9 

Recording the game

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Competitive play does not include recording the game, unlike chess. The game is fast-paced, no standard notation exists, and players keep their initial setups secret, so recording over-the-board games is impractical.

However, digital interfaces such as web-based gaming interfaces may have a facility for recording, replaying and downloading the game. Those interfaces use an algebraic-style notation that numbers the rows ('ranks') 1 to 10 from bottom to top and the columns ('files') A to J from left to right. Alternately, a few interfaces designate the files as A to K, omitting 'I'. Moves are recorded as source square followed by destination square separated by a "-" (move) or "x" (strike). Revealed pieces on strikes precede the square designation, and may be by either rank name or rank number for brevity, for example "major B2xcaptain B3". The bottom half of the board is by default considered to be the 'red' side, and the top half the 'blue' side.[citation needed]

Strategy

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Unlike chess, Stratego is a game of imperfect information. In addition to calculated sequences of moves, this gives rise to aspects of battle psychology such as concealment, bluffing, lying in wait and guessing.

Pieces

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Classic pieces

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There are seven immobile pieces – six Bombs and one Flag – and 33 mobile pieces per player. They can move to the adjacent square in horizontal or vertical direction, with exception of the Scout, which moves any distance. From highest rank to lowest the pieces are:

US / EU Rank "Classic" US Rank Piece Count per player Special properties
B B Bomb 6 Immovable; any piece attacking a Bomb is removed from the game, unless the attacking piece was a Miner
10 1 Marshal 1 Most powerful piece, but vulnerable to capture by an attacking Spy
9 2 General 1
8 3 Colonel 2
7 4 Major 3
6 5 Captain 4
5 6 Lieutenant 4
4 7 Sergeant 4
3 8 Miner 5 Can defuse (i. e. capture) Bombs
2 9 Scout 8 Can move any distance in a horizontal or vertical straight line without leaping over pieces or lakes; originally unable to move and attack in the same turn,[7] later changed to allow movement and attack.[8]
1 S Spy 1 Weakest piece, captured by any other attacking piece, but an attacking Spy can capture the Marshal
F F Flag 1 Immovable; capturing the opponent's Flag wins the game

The higher ranked piece always captures the lower, except when stated otherwise. When a piece attacks another piece with equal rank, both are removed.[7][8]

In the original versions published in the United States, the ranks were numbered with the most powerful Marshal piece ranked at 1, then numbers ascending as power fell until Scout was 9, and the Spy was not numbered but designated S.[7] In 2000, this was inverted, with the Marshal ranked as 10, descending to 2 for the Scout, and the Spy ranked with number 1.[8] "Classic" versions have been released since then with the lower number strongest, as in prior versions of the game.[7]

Variant pieces

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Variant versions of the game have a few different pieces with different rules of movement, such as the Cannon, Archer (possibly a different name for the Cannon), Spotter, Infiltrator, Corporal and Cavalry Captain. In one version, mobile pieces are allowed to "carry" the Flag. In some variants such as Stratego Waterloo and Fire and Ice Stratego, all or most of the pieces have substantially different moves.

History

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Japanese Military Chess

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Gunjin Shogi (23-piece)

Japanese Military Chess (Gunjin Shogi [ja]) has been sold and played since as early as 1895, although it is not known by whom and when it was invented.[9]: 129–130  Dr. Christian Junghans reported this game in Monatshefte magazine in Germany in 1905. It seems, only after reading his article, Julie Berg took out a patent on a war game in London and Paris in 1907.[10] Similarly, Hermance Edan took a patent for L'attaque game in 1909[11] and sold them in 1910.[9]: 154–158 

The main differences between Gunjin Shogi and Stratego are:

  • Gunjin Shogi needs a referee to resolve the battles of the pieces, which are kept face-down throughout the game.[12]
  • The Flag is placed only on the headquarters and a player who successfully occupied the headquarters of the opponent shall win the game.
  • There are no Scout pieces. The Engineers and Spy have the same movement as the Scouts in Stratego.
  • Only flag and senior officers can occupy the opponent's headquarters.
  • Engineer (analog of miner) can remove mines and tanks.

There are at least three different versions of Gunjin Shogi, distinguished by the number of pieces controlled by each player as well as the size of the board. The 23- and 31-piece versions are similar, influenced by the technology of World War I, and the 25-piece version is a more recent development, incorporating technologies developed during World War II.[12]

French L'Attaque

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In nearly its present form Stratego appeared in France from La Samaritaine in 1910, and then in Britain before World War I, as a game called L'Attaque.[13][14] Historian and game collector Thierry Depaulis writes:[15]

It was in fact designed by a lady, Mademoiselle Hermance Edan, who filed a patent for a "jeu de bataille avec pièces mobiles sur damier" (a battle game with mobile pieces on a gameboard) on 1908-11-26. The patent was released by the French Patent Office in 1909 (patent #396.795). Hermance Edan had given no name to her game but a French manufacturer named Au Jeu Retrouvé was selling the game as L'Attaque as early as 1910.

The French patent has 36 pieces for each player and also has a slightly different board layout, but it introduced the same hierarchical rules of attack and movement followed by modern versions of the game.[11] Depaulis further notes the 1910 version had two armies, divided into red and blue colors. The rules of L'attaque were basically the same as for the game we know as Stratego. It featured standing cardboard rectangular pieces, color printed with soldiers who wore contemporary (to 1900) uniforms, not Napoleonic uniforms. In papers of her estate, Ms. Edan states that she developed the game in the 1880s.[15]

H. P. Gibson & Sons games

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The publishing rights for L'Attaque were acquired for the United Kingdom by game maker H.P. Gibson and Sons in 1925,[16] retaining the French name through at least the 1970s.[17][18] Gibsons also produced several modified forms of the game, at least one of which predates the acquisition of the rights:

  • Dover Patrol – a naval warfare game on a board of 12×8 squares devised by Harry A. Gibson in 1911, but very similar to L'Attaque (and hence Stratego)
  • Aviation (game) – an air battle variation designed by Harry Gibson in 1925, with a variant called Battle of Britain sold in the 1970s
  • Tri-Tactics – a game combining land, sea and air warfare on a 12×12 board, with 56 pieces per person, dating from 1932, evolved from the above games.[19]

In 2019, Gibsons released a 100th anniversary edition of L'Attaque. This edition included both the original and modern rules.[20]

Stratego (classic)

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Stratego was created by Dutchman Jacques Johan Mogendorff sometime before 1942. The name was registered as a trademark in 1942 by the Dutch company Van Perlstein & Roeper Bosch N.V. (which also produced the first edition of Monopoly). After WW2, Mogendorff licensed Stratego to Smeets and Schippers, a Dutch company, in 1946. Hausemann and Hotte acquired a license in 1958 for European distribution, and in 1959 for global distribution. After Mogendorff's death in 1961, Hausemann and Hotte purchased the trademark from his heirs, and sublicensed it to Milton Bradley (which was acquired by Hasbro in 1984) in 1961 for United States distribution. It is introduced to the people of the United States as, "the American version of the game now popular on the Continent."[21] In 2009, Hausemann and Hotte was succeeded by Koninklijke Jumbo B.V. in the Netherlands.

The modern game of Stratego, with its Napoleonic imagery, was originally manufactured in the Netherlands. Pieces were originally made of printed cardboard and inserted in metal clip stands. After World War II, painted wood pieces became standard.[22] Starting in the early 1960s all versions switched to plastic pieces. The change from wood to plastic was made for economical reasons, as was the case with many products during that period, but with Stratego the change also served a structural function: Unlike the wooden pieces, the plastic pieces were designed with a small base. The wooden pieces had none, often resulting in pieces tipping over. This was disastrous for that player, since it often immediately revealed the piece's rank, as well as unleashing a literal domino effect by having a falling piece knock over other pieces. European versions introduced cylindrical castle-shaped pieces that proved to be popular. American editions later introduced new rectangular pieces with a more stable base and colorful stickers, not images directly imprinted on the plastic.

European versions of the game give the Marshal the highest number (10), while the initial American versions give the Marshal the lowest number (1) to show the highest value (i.e. it is the #1 or most powerful tile). More recent American versions of the game, which adopted the European system, caused considerable complaint among American players who grew up in the 1960s and 1970s. This may have been a factor in the release of a Nostalgic edition, in a wooden box, reproducing the Classic edition of the early 1970s.

Modern Stratego variations

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Electronic Stratego

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Electronic Stratego was introduced by Milton Bradley in 1982. To promote the release, the company hired two actors to play Ronald Reagan and Leonid Brezhnev, who played a match at the New York Public Library Main Branch.[23]

It has features that make many aspects of the game strikingly different from those of classic Stratego. The board is 8 wide by 10 squares deep, instead of 10×10. The blocked "lake" areas are therefore 1×2 instead of 2×2. Each side has 24 pieces, instead of 40, deployed in the three rows closest to the player; instead of six bomb pieces, Electronic Stratego uses hidden bomb pegs.[24]

Each type of playing piece in Electronic Stratego has a unique series of bumps on its bottom that are read by the game's battery-operated touch-sensitive "board".[24]: 7  When attacking another piece, the attacking player hits their Strike button, presses their piece and then the targeted piece: the game either rewards a successful attack or punishes a failed strike with an appropriate bit of music.[24]: 22–25  In this way the players never know for certain the rank of the piece that wins the attack, only whether the attack wins, fails, or ties (similar to the role of the referee in the Chinese game of Luzhanqi).[25] Instead of choosing to move a piece, a player can opt to "probe" an opposing piece by hitting the Probe button and pressing down on the enemy piece: the game then beeps out a rough approximation of the strength of that piece.[24]: 26–27 

There are no Bomb pieces: Bombs are set using pegs placed on a touch-sensitive "peg board" that is closed from view prior to the start of the game.[24]: 16–19  Hence, it is possible for a player to have their piece occupying a square with a bomb on it.[25] If an opposing piece lands on the seemingly empty square, the game plays the sound of an explosion and that piece is removed from play. As in classic Stratego, only a Miner can remove a Bomb from play.

The Scout is allowed to move diagonally, in addition to its usual horizontal and vertical moves. Again, as with the non-electronic Stratego, scouts are not allowed to jump over pieces.[24]: 28–33 

A player who successfully captures the opposing Flag is rewarded with a triumphant bit of music from the 1812 Overture.[24]: 36 [25]

New pieces and versions

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In the late 1990s, the Jumbo Company released several European variants, including a three- and four-player version, and a new Cannon piece (which jumps two squares to capture any piece, but loses to any attack against it). It also included some alternate rules such as Barrage (a quicker two-player game with fewer pieces) and Reserves (reinforcements in the three- and four-player games). The four-player version appeared in America in 1997.

Starting in the 2000s, Hasbro, under its Milton Bradley label, released a series of popular media-themed Stratego editions.

Besides themed variants with substantially different rules, current production includes three slightly different editions: sets with classic (1961) piece numbering (highest rank=1), sets with European piece numbering (highest rank=10), and sets that allow substitution of one or two variant pieces such as Cannons, usually in place of scouts. Sets produced since 1970 or so have uniformly adopted the rule that scouts can move and strike in the same turn.

Stratego AI

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In July 2022, DeepMind announced the development of DeepNash, a model-free multi-agent reinforcement learning system capable of playing Stratego at the level of a human expert.[26] Stratego has been difficult to model well because the opponent's pieces are hidden, making it a game of imperfect information, the initial setup has more than 1066 possible states, and the overall game tree has 10535 possible states. DeepNash was able to win 84% of 50 ranked matches in online matches hosted by Gravon over a period of two weeks in April 2022 against human players, and won at a minimum rate of 97% over hundreds of matches against previously-developed Stratego-playing programs including Probe, Master of the Flag, Demon of Ignorance, Asmodeus, Celsius, PeternLewis, and Vixen.[27]

[edit]

Stratego and its predecessor L'Attaque have spawned several derivative games, notably one 20th century Chinese game, "Game of the fighting animals" (Dou Shou Qi) also known as Jungle or "Animal Chess".

The game Jungle also has pieces (but of animals rather than soldiers) with different ranks and pieces with higher rank capture the pieces with lower rank. The board, with two lakes in the middle, is also remarkably similar to that in Stratego. The major differences between the two games is that in Jungle, the pieces are not hidden from the opponent, and the setup is fixed. According to historian R.C. Bell, this game is 20th century, and cannot have been a predecessor of L'Attaque or Stratego.[citation needed]

A more elaborate and complex Chinese game known as Land Battle Chess (Lu Zhan Qi) or Army Chess (Lu Zhan Jun Qi) is a similar board game to Stratego, with a few differences: It is played on a 5×13 board with two un-occupiable spaces in the middle, and each player has 25 playing pieces. The setup is not fixed, both players keep their pieces hidden from their opponent, and the objective is to capture the enemy's flag.[2] Lu Zhan Jun Qi's basic gameplay is similar, though differences include "missile" pieces and a xiangqi-style board layout with the addition of railroads and defensive "camps". A third person is also typically used as a referee to decide battles between pieces without revealing their identities. An expanded version of the Land Battle Chess game also exists, adding naval and aircraft pieces and is known as Sea-Land-Air Battle Chess (Hai Lu Kong Zhan Qi).[3] There is also a 4-player version of Lu Zhan Jun Qi that has players opposite to each other on the board be on the same team and try to capture the opposite teams' flags and can defend each other from the opposition's attacks.

  • Tri-tactics, by Gibson & Sons introduced in the 1950s combining L'Attaque, Dover Patrol and Aviation. The pieces represented fighting units (e.g. "division", "battalion", "brigade") rather than individual soldiers. The board consisted of land, ocean, rivers and lakes.
  • Game of the Generals, a Philippine variety of Stratego introduced in 1973 played on a modified (8×9) chessboard
  • battle for the temple, an Israeli game by Isratoys company

A capture the flag game called "Stratego" and loosely based on the board game is played at summer camps. In this game, two teams of thirty to sixty players are assigned ranks by distribution of coloured objects such as pinnies or glowsticks, the colours representing rank, not team. Players can tag and capture lower-ranked opponents, with the exception that the lowest rank captures the highest. Players who do not know their teammates may not be able to tell which team other players are on, creating incomplete information and opportunities for bluffing.

Versions

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Stratego Fortress

The game remains in production, with new versions continuing to appear every few years. These are a few of the notable ones. The first U.S. edition (1961) Milton Bradley set, and a special edition 1963 set called Stratego Fine, had wooden pieces. The 1961 wood pieces had a design that looked like vines scaling a castle wall on the back. But later 1961 productions featured plastic pieces (not true first editions). All other regular editions had plastic pieces. A few special editions as noted below had wooden or metal pieces.

Classic versions

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These have 10×10 boards, 40 pieces per side with classic pieces and rules of movement.

Official Modern Version: Also known as Stratego Original. Redesigned pieces and game art. The pieces now use stickers attached to new "castle-like" plastic pieces. The stickers must be applied by the player after purchase. Rank numbering is reversed in European style (higher numbers equals higher rank). Comes with an optional alternate piece, the Infiltrator.

Nostalgia Game Series Edition: Released 2002. Traditional stamped plastic pieces, although the metallic paint is dull and less reflective than some older versions, and the pieces are not engraved as some previous editions were. Wooden box, traditional board and piece numbering.

Stratego 50th Anniversary (2011) by Spin Master comes in both a book-style box and a cookie-tin-like metal box, with original new artwork, pieces and gameplay. It includes optional Cannons (2 per player) playing pieces.

Library Edition: Hasbro's Library Series puts what appears to be the classic Stratego of the Nostalgia Edition into a compact, book-like design. The wooden box approximates the size of a book and is made to fit in a bookcase in one's library. In this version, the scout may not move and strike in the same turn.

Michael Graves Design Stratego by Milton Bradley introduced in 2002 and sold exclusively through Target Stores. It features a finished wood box, wooden pedestal board, and closed black and white roughly wedge-shaped plastic pieces. Limited production, no longer available.

Stratego Onyx: Introduced in 2008, Stratego Onyx was sold exclusively by Barnes & Noble. It includes foil-stamped wooden game pieces and a raised gameboard with a decorative wooden frame. One-time production, no longer available.

Franklin Mint Civil War Collector's Edition: In the mid-1990s, Franklin Mint created a luxury version of Stratego with an American Civil War theme and gold- and silver-plated pieces. Due to a last-minute licensing problem, the set was never officially released and offered for sale. The only remaining copies are those sent to the company's retail stores for display.[citation needed]

Variant Versions

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These have substantially different configurations and rules.

Ultimate Stratego: No longer in production, this version can still be found at some online stores and specialty gaming stores. This version is a variant of traditional Stratego and can accommodate up to 4 players simultaneously. The Ultimate Stratego board game contained four different Stratego versions: "Ultimate Lightning", "Alliance Campaign", "Alliance Lightning" and "Ultimate Campaign".

Science Fiction Version: Jumbo B.V. / Spin Master version of Stratego, common in North American department stores. The game has a futuristic science fiction theme. Played on a smaller 8×10 board, with 30 pieces per player. Features unique Spotter playing pieces.

Stratego Waterloo: For the bicentenary of the Battle of Waterloo in June 2015, the Dutch publishing group Jumbo published Stratego Waterloo. Instead of using ranks, the different historical units that had actually fought at the battle were added as Pawns (Old Guard, 95th Rifles...) – each with their own strengths and weaknesses.[28] The Pawns are divided into light infantry, line infantry, light cavalry, heavy cavalry, artillery, commanders and commanders-in-chief (Wellington and Napoleon). Instead of capturing the Flag, the players must get two of their pawns on the lines of communication of their opponent.

From highest rank to lowest the pieces are:

Rank French (Blue) Allied (Red)
Initial forces Prussian reinforcements (Black)
Name Count Name Count Name Count
8/1 Emperor Napoleon (France) 1 Duke of Wellington (Britain) 1
7/2 Marshal Ney (France) 1 Lord Uxbridge (Britain) 1 Field Marshal Von Bulow (Prussia) 1
6/3 Empress's Dragoons (French Imperial Guard) 2 British Royal Guards 2
5/4 Polish Lancers (French Imperial Guard) 4 Scots Greys & Highland Regiments (Scottish cavalry and infantry, respectively) 3
4/5 Cuirassiers (French Imperial Guard) 5 Dutch Carabiniers (cavalry) 3
3/6 French Line Infantry 15 KGL Infantry (Britain) 18 Prussian Infantry 3
2/7 Chasseurs a Cheval (French cavalry) 6 95th Rifles (British infantry) & KGL Hussars (British cavalry) 8 Silesian Landwehr (Prussian cavalry & infantry) 8
1/8 French Light Infantry 5 Brunswick Leib ("Black Infantry") 3
Artillery 8 Artillery 6 Artillery 1
Totals France 47 Allies 45 Prussia 13

The higher ranked piece always captures the lower

Stratego Conquest: 1996, two- to four-handed game played on world map; alternate pieces cannons and cavalry

Stratego Fortress: A 3D version of Stratego featuring a 3-level fortress and mystical themed pieces and maneuvers

Fire and Ice Stratego: The Hasbro version called Fire and Ice Stratego has different pieces and rules of movement. The game features a smaller 8×10 board and each player has 30 magical and mythological themed pieces with special powers.

Promotional

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Hertog Jan, a Dutch brand of beer, released Stratego Tournament, a promotional version of Stratego with variant rules. It includes substantially fewer pieces, including only one Bomb and no Miners. Since each side has only about 18 pieces, the pieces are far more mobile. The scout in this version is allowed to move three squares in any combination of directions (including L-shapes) and there is a new piece called the Archer, which is defeated by anything, but can defeat any piece other than the Bomb by shooting it from a two-square distance, in direct orthogonal, or straight, directions only. If one player is unable to move any more of his or her pieces, the game results in a tie because neither player's Flag was captured.

Themed

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These variants are produced by the company with pop-culture-themed pieces licensed from their respective owners:

Produced by Avalon Hill:

Produced by USAopoly:

Competition

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There are now many Stratego competitions held throughout the world. The game is particularly popular in the Netherlands, Germany, Greece, and Belgium, where regular world and national championships are organized. The international Stratego scene has, more recently, been dominated by players from The Netherlands. Stratego World Championships have been held since 1997 and continue to be held yearly around August; the latest was 2023 in The Netherlands. In August the next World Championships will be held in Nürnberg in Germany.

Stratego competitions are now held in all four versions of the game:

Classic Stratego
Competitions in the original game include the "Classic Stratego World Championships", the "Classic Stratego Olympiad" and several National Championships from various different countries.
Ultimate Lightning Stratego
In this version of the game, each side has only 20 pieces. A few pieces have variant moves and there are a few rule differences. Games take only a fraction of the time needed for Classic Stratego. Competitions in this version include the "Ultimate Lightning World Championships" and the "Ultimate Lightning European Championships".
Duel Stratego
The version is played with 10 pieces per side on an 8×10 board. Competitions in this version now include the "Stratego Duel World Championships," which were held for the first time in August 2009 (Sheffield, England).
Stratego Barrage
To force decisions in knock-out stages in tournaments, in 1992 Stratego Barrage was developed by Marc Perriëns and Roel Eefting. In this "Quick-Stratego" a setup can be made in one minute and played in 5 minutes. The eight pieces with which Barrage is played are the Flag, the Marshall, the General, 1 Bomb, 1 Miner, 2 Scouts and the Spy. Since 1992 Dutch Championships and since 2000 World Championships in Barrage have been organised. Cambodian Champion is Sor Samedy, Dutch Champion (2014) is Ruben van de Built, World Champion (2013) is Tim Slagboom.

Tournaments

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World Championships Stratego Classic (40 pieces)


Year Host Gold Silver Bronze
1997 United Kingdom London Netherlands Peter van Bodegom Netherlands George Franka Netherlands Erik van den Berg
1998 United Kingdom London Netherlands Luc Adriaansen Netherlands Sander Rinzema Netherlands Erik van den Berg
1999 United Kingdom London Netherlands Johnny van Geffen Netherlands René Helmus Netherlands George Franka
2000 United Kingdom London Netherlands Erik van den Berg Netherlands André Pols Netherlands Wim Snelleman
2001 Germany Berlin Netherlands Erik van den Berg Netherlands René Helmus Netherlands Vincent de Boer
2002 Netherlands Rotterdam Netherlands Erik van den Berg Netherlands Dennis Baas Netherlands Wim Snelleman
2003 Austria Vienna Netherlands Vincent de Boer Netherlands André Pols Netherlands Wout Gulden
2004 Belgium Antwerp Netherlands Vincent de Boer Netherlands Erik van den Berg Netherlands Luc Adriaansen
2005 Not held
2006 Belgium Antwerp Netherlands Erik van den Berg Netherlands Ricardo Kik Germany Mark Blockhaus
2007 Belgium Antwerp Netherlands Vincent de Boer Germany Ralf Sandkuhle Netherlands Erik van den Berg
2008 Ukraine Kyiv Netherlands Pim Niemeijer Netherlands Tim Slagboom Netherlands Vincent de Boer
2009 Germany Gladbeck Germany Steffen Annies Netherlands Tim Slagboom Netherlands Pim Niemeijer
2010 Netherlands Maastricht Netherlands Pim Niemeijer Netherlands Tim Slagboom Germany Andreas Bonnermann
2011 United Kingdom North Shields United Kingdom Richard Ratcliffe Netherlands Tim Slagboom Netherlands George Franka
2012 Netherlands Haastrecht Netherlands Pim Niemeijer United Kingdom Richard Ratcliffe Czech Republic Martin Ehrenberger
2013 Germany Berlin Netherlands Tim Slagboom Germany Steffen Annies Germany Axel Hangg
2014 Greece Thessaloniki Netherlands Tim Slagboom Netherlands George Franka Netherlands Ruben van de Bilt
2015 Belgium Waterloo Netherlands Pim Niemeijer Netherlands Johnny van Geffen Netherlands Vincent de Boer
2016 Germany Rendsburg Greece Stavros Sekertzis Netherlands Tim Slagboom Netherlands John Schepers
2017 Greece Marmari Netherlands Anjo Travaille Netherlands Tim Slagboom Greece John Vandoros
2018 Netherlands Naarden Greece John Vandoros Netherlands Vince van Geffen Netherlands Sem van Geffen
2019 United Kingdom Sheffield Netherlands Tim Slagboom Netherlands Pim Niemeijer United States Angel Baron
2020 Not held due to the COVID-19 pandemic
2021
2022 Greece Kalavryta Greece Gerasimos Karelas Netherlands Max Roelofs Netherlands Anjo Travaille
2023 Netherlands Amsterdam Netherlands Vince van Geffen Netherlands Max Roelofs Netherlands Sem van Geffen
2024 Germany Nüremberg Netherlands Vince van Geffen Netherlands Tim Slagboom Netherlands Max Roelofs

World Championships Stratego Juniors Classic (40 pieces)


Year Host Gold Silver Bronze
2001 Germany Berlin Netherlands Roel Verleysdonk Netherlands Thomas Kok Netherlands Niels Hardorff
2002 Netherlands Rotterdam Netherlands Roel Verleysdonk Netherlands Niels Hardorff Netherlands Jordy de Raef
2003 Austria Vienna Netherlands Roel Verleysdonk Netherlands Jordy de Raef Netherlands Peter Verleysdonnk
2004 Belgium Antwerp Netherlands Roel Verleysdonk Netherlands Pim Niemeijer France Julien Alexis
2005 Not held
2006 Belgium Antwerp Netherlands Peter Verleysdonk Netherlands Bert Verleysdonk Germany Vincent Pausch
2007 Not held
2008 Ukraine Kyiv Ukraine Maksym Malyshevsky Ukraine Yuriy Mykhalyuk Ukraine Nazariy Klyuzhnyy
2009 Germany Gladbeck Germany Ansgar Pausch Belgium Filip Andriessen Germany Benedikt Abel
2010 Netherlands Maastricht Netherlands Steven van den Enden Germany Wilhelm David Weber Germany Ruben Trittin
2011 United Kingdom North Shields Germany Adrian Hangg Germany Ruben Trittin United Kingdom Emerson Ratcliffe
2012 Netherlands Haastrecht Germany Simon Quinn Germany Wilhelm David Weber Belgium Filip Andriessen
2013 Germany Berlin Germany Wilhelm David Weber Germany Timon Abel Germany Nighel Apostel
2014 Greece Thessaloniki Greece Ioannis Takatinis Greece Anastasia Takatiui Greece Iosif Fragkou
2015 Belgium Waterloo Netherlands Vince van Geffen Netherlands Sem van Geffen Netherlands Bram Geelhoed
2016 Germany Rendsburg Germany Nils Abel Germany Lasse Baasch Germany Mads Sievers
2017 Greece Marmari Greece Elissaios Vandoros Greece Ernestos Pilalis Greece Filippos Mpanitsiotis
2018 Netherlands Naarden Netherlands Thomas Geelhoed Netherlands Daniel Geelhoed United Kingdom Woody Melbourne
2019 United Kingdom Sheffield United Kingdom Woody Melbourne United Kingdom Elly Melbourne Belgium Alexander de Almeida
2020 Not held due to the COVID-19 pandemic
2021
2022 Greece Kalavryta Greece Faidon Kougiemitros Greece Ermis Metaxas-Mariatos Greece Evangelia Arkoumani
2023 Not held
2024 Germany Nüremberg Austria Lio Birnbaumer Germany Ilyan Jánváry Germany Andor Jánváry

World Championships Stratego Barrage (8 pieces)


Year Host Gold Silver Bronze
2006 United Kingdom London Netherlands Roel Eefting United Kingdom Richard Ratcliffe Netherlands Dennis Baas
2007 Not held
2008 United Kingdom London United Kingdom Richard Ratcliffe United Kingdom Chris Sergeant United Kingdom Luke Daniels
2009 Not held
2010
2011 United Kingdom Newcastle United Kingdom Richard Ratcliffe Netherlands Kees de Vos Netherlands Mark Baardman
2012 Not held
2013
2014 Greece Thessaloniki Netherlands Ruben van de Bilt United Kingdom Richard Ratcliffe Netherlands Theo Gerrits
2015 Belgium Waterloo Germany Axel Hangg Netherlands Pim Niemeijer Netherlands David Bouten
2016 Not held
2017
2018 Netherlands Naarden Netherlands Pim Niemeijer Germany Axel Hangg Netherlands Roel Eefting
2019 United Kingdom Sheffield United Kingdom Richard Ratcliffe United States Angel Baron Netherlands Dennis Baas
2020 Not held due to the COVID-19 pandemic
2021
2022 Greece Kalavryta Netherlands Pim Niemeijer Netherlands Dennis Baas Greece Gerasimos Karelas
2023 Netherlands Amsterdam Switzerland Sébastien Crot United Kingdom Joshua Critchlow Germany Axel Hangg
2024 Germany Nüremberg Germany Axel Hangg Germany Nils Tiedemann Germany Yannick Müller

Other tournaments

Stratego boards set at the 2024 Patras Battles tournament.

  • 1991 First Dutch Championship. In 1991 the first Dutch Stratego Championship was being organized by Johan van der Wielen, Roel Eefting and Marc Perriëns. One hundred and eight players participated in this event in Nijmegen. Wim Snelleman was the winner. Several Dutch Championships would follow.
  • 1997 First Cambodian Championship. In 1997 Cambodia had the scoop to be the first Asian country in which its national Classic Stratego Championship was being organized. Organizer Roel Eefting defeated runner-up Max van Wel.
  • 1998 Second Cambodian Championship. In 1998 Roel Eefting surprisingly lost his title to fellow Dutchman Marc Nickel (Derks), who ironically was invited by him on a journey together through Cambodia.
  • 2007 World Team Cup. The World Team cup is played annually at the World Championships. It is a four player event with teams competing for their country. Holland defeated Germany in the 2007 World Team Cup.
  • 2007 Stratego Olympiad. The 2007 Stratego Olympiad was held as part of the list of events within the Mind Sports Olympics. The 2007 event was held near London, England on 25 and 26 August 2007. Roel Eefting won both the event and the World Title on Barrage (Quick-Stratego which is played with 8 pieces).
  • 2007 Stratego World Team Championship. The Stratego World Team Championship is held as part of the events at the Mind Sports Olympics.[29] This event is a three player event with teams competing for their country. Great Britain defeated Holland in the 2007 World Team Championships.
  • 2007 Computer Stratego World Championship. StrategoUSA[30] conducted the first open tournament ever held for Stratego AI programs during December 2007. Programs played Classic Stratego rules in a round robin format. The tournament was a demonstration of state-of-the-art Stratego AI, with the hope it would spur new research into Stratego AI methodology. The winning program was Probe, which finished with a record of 17–0–3 (W–L–D).
  • 2008 Computer Stratego World Championship. The 2008 tournament was held during December with six programs participating. Once again, StrategoUSA hosted the tournament online. Probe repeated as the champion, with a record of 22–3–0 (W–L–D).
  • 2009 Computer Stratego World Championship. The 2009 tournament was held in December. Once again, StrategoUSA hosted the tournament online. The winner was Master of the Flag II, with a record of 30–3–2 (W–L–D).
  • 2010 Stratego World Championship. The 2010 tournament was held in August, in Maastricht, Netherlands, Pim Neimejer (Netherlands) won the World Championship (overall score). Lady Kathryn Whitehorn (England) won the Women's Stratego World Championship. In team play, The Netherlands National Team won Gold (first), Germany Silver (second), and England Bronze (third).
  • 2010 Computer Stratego World Championship. The 2010 tournament was held in December. Once again, StrategoUSA hosted the tournament online. The winner was Probe, with a record of 24–3–3 (W–L–D).
  • 2016 - today Patras Battles. Since 2016 almost every year in Patras the local team Patras Stratego Team organizes this international tournament inviting the best players from all over the world.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ However, due to a misprint, this meant that when the winning piece is the struck piece, it moves out of position to take the space previously occupied by the striker.[4] The rules were amended later to make it clear that when the winning piece is the struck (defending) piece, it remains in place.[8]

Reviews

[edit]
  • Family Games: The 100 Best[31]

References

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  1. ^ Webster's Third New International Dictionary, strategus or strategos:1
  2. ^ Oxford English Dictionary, strategus or stragegos, source footnote
  3. ^ Milton Bradley 1961 edition (wooden pieces) and Milton Bradley 1967 edition (plastic pieces)
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Rules of Stratego". Milton Bradley. 1961.
  5. ^ A.F.C. Arts (2010). Competitive Play in Stratego (PDF) (Thesis). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2014-03-06.
  6. ^ de Boer, Vincent (November 2007). "Invincible: A Strategy Bot" (PDF). TU Delft. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2011-01-24. Retrieved 2022-04-14.
  7. ^ a b c d e "Stratego Classic Instructions" (PDF). Milton Bradley. 2002. Retrieved 17 July 2023.
  8. ^ a b c d e "Stratego Instructions" (PDF). Hasbro. 1996. Retrieved 17 July 2023.
  9. ^ a b Takahashi, Hironor i (2016). "Military Chess in Japan and the World". The Institute of Amusement Industry Studies Osaka University of Commerce No. 18. JPN.
  10. ^ FR Patent 379625A, Julie Berg, "Jeu de la guerre", published November 13, 1907 
  11. ^ a b c d FR patent 396795, Hermance Edan, "Jeu de bataille ave pièces mobiles sur damier", published 20 April 1909 
  12. ^ a b "日本軍人将棋連盟ホームページにようこそ" [Welcome to the website of the Japan Military Shogi Federation]. tanken.com (in Japanese). Retrieved 18 July 2023. 駒や盤の取り方などは時代によって(あるいは製造元によって)多少異なるようです。第1次大戦後にはタンクや地雷が、第2次大戦後には毒ガスや飛行機、原爆が登場するなど、現実の戦争に応じて、次々と進化を遂げてきました。[Pieces and boards differ slightly depending on when or who manufactured them. After World War I, tanks and mines were included, and after World War II, poison gas, airplanes, and atomic bombs were added.]
  13. ^ Lewin, Christopher George (2012). War Games and Their History. UK: Fonthill Media. p. 159. ISBN 978-1-78155-042-7.
  14. ^ "L'Attaque". Board Game Geek. Retrieved 29 August 2011.
  15. ^ a b "The History of Stratego | UltraBoardGames". www.ultraboardgames.com. Retrieved 2020-02-05.
  16. ^ "Little Wars". Time. 14 December 1942.
  17. ^ "L'attaque". Victoria & Albert Museum. Retrieved 18 July 2023.
  18. ^ "Board game: L'Attaque!". Google Arts & Culture. Retrieved 18 July 2023.
  19. ^ Lewin, Christopher George (2012). War Games and Their History. UK: Fonthill Media. p. 161. ISBN 978-1-78155-042-7.
  20. ^ "Gibsons release 100th anniversary edition of L'Attaque". Gibsons Games. February 5, 2019. Retrieved 18 July 2023.
  21. ^ Stratego box, 1961
  22. ^ Waggoner, Susan (2007). Under the Tree: the Toys and Treats That Made Christmas Special, 1930–1970. Stewart, Tabori & Chang. ISBN 978-1584796411.
  23. ^ "Stratego Summit Held". Electronic Games. February 1983. Retrieved 7 August 2023.
  24. ^ a b c d e f g "Electronic Stratego" (PDF). Milton Bradley. 1982.
  25. ^ a b c Worley, Joyce (October 1982). "Lead the Electronic Army to Victory!". Electronic Games. Retrieved 7 August 2023.
  26. ^ "Deepmind AI Researchers Introduce 'DeepNash', An Autonomous Agent Trained With Model-Free Multiagent Reinforcement Learning That Learns To Play The Game Of Stratego At Expert Level". MarkTechPost. 9 July 2022.
  27. ^ Perolat, Julien; De Vylder, Bart; Hennes, Daniel; Trassov, Eugene; Strub, Florian; De Boer, Vincent; Muller, Paul; Connor, Jerome T. (1 December 2022). "Mastering the game of Stratego with model-free multiagent reinforcement learning". Science. 378 (6623): 990–996. arXiv:2206.15378. Bibcode:2022Sci...378..990P. doi:10.1126/science.add4679. PMID 36454847. S2CID 250144392.
  28. ^ "Stratego Waterloo: Rules of the game" (PDF). Jumbo. 2015. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 14, 2015.
  29. ^ "Mind Sports Olympiad – Stratego". Boardability.com. 2012-08-19. Retrieved 2012-11-27.
  30. ^ StrategoUSA, formerly at http://www.strategoUSA.org, is a defunct organization
  31. ^ Lowder, James (2010). Family games : The 100 best. Green Ronin. ISBN 978-1-934547-21-2.

Further reading

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  • Stratego Piece by Piece: History, Strategy, Tactics and Deployment, 1999, Prof. Michael Ziegler, Manor College, PA (private printing and distribution, not generally available)
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