Friar and Farmhand, gry planszowe

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CARCASSONNE: THE FRIAR AND THE FARMHAND
Carcassonne: Friar and Farmhand are two unofficial expansion tiles similar to the
mini-expansion "Carcassonne: King and Robber Baron" (from Carcassonne: King and
Scout). At the beginning of the game, all cards are placed at the side of the playing
field.
The King
When a player places a card that completes the first city, he takes the King and
places it before himself on the table. Later in the game, if another player completes a
larger city than any so far in the game, he takes the King. At the end of the game,
the player who has the King, scores
one point for each completed city
in the game.
The Robber Baron
The Robber Baron works like the King. The Robber Baron always goes to the player
who completed the longest road. The player who has completed the longest road
takes possession of this tile. At the end of the game, the player who has the Robber
Baron, scores
one point for each completed road
in the game.
The Friar and The Farmhand tiles.
Print and attach to unused Scout tiles (if you don’t play H&G).
The Farmhand
The Farmhand is held by the player who has deployed the most farmers. In the case
of a draw, the Farmhand is retained by the player who won him first. If a different
player deploys more farmers than anyone else, this player then receives the
Farmhand. Followers residing on the market of Carcassonne (only relevant if The
Count of Carcassonne mini-expansion is being used) do not count at first, but it could
well be the case that, as these followers are deployed to farms at the end of the game,
the farmhand will pass between players frequently.
Whoever is in possession of the Farmhand at the end of the game earns
two points for
every small farmyard
(small houses which were previously irrelevant for the game)
on
the biggest farm
. Farmyards on the bordering road crossings are counted.
The Friar
The Friar is held by the player who has just completed a cloister (that is, he or she has
just placed the ninth and last tile of a cloister. Whoever is in possession of the Friar at
the end of the game earns
two points for every completed cloister and one point for
every incomplete cloister
. However, only cloisters which have at some time been
occupied are scored. If a cloister is placed on the playing field and yet not occupied by
a monk, then this cloister immediately receives a "Friar Scoring Counter", so that
during the final scoring it is clear which cloisters have been occupied by a monk and
which not.
Markers for keeping track of scoring. ‘No Monk’ tokens for the Friar.
Many thanks to Klaus-Jurgen Wrede for the rules, Christoph Berger for the
illustrations, Mathew Harper for translation, George Vriese for the markers,
and Jonathan Wu for the inspiration. 2005-12-27
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