Strategic Conquest
Encyclopedia
Strategic Conquest is a two-player turn-based strategy
Turn-based strategy
A turn-based strategy game is a strategy game where players take turns when playing...

 game for the Apple II
Apple II
The Apple II is an 8-bit home computer, one of the first highly successful mass-produced microcomputer products, designed primarily by Steve Wozniak, manufactured by Apple Computer and introduced in 1977...

 and Apple Macintosh, similar to Empire
Classic Empire (computer game)
Empire is a turn-based wargame with simple rules, conceived by Walter Bright in 1971 based on various war movies and board games, notably Battle of Britain and Risk. In the game, each player starts with one city in an unexplored world, and uses the city to build armies, aircraft, and various...

. It was published by PBI Software and the Macintosh version was continued by Delta Tao Software
Delta Tao Software
Delta Tao Software is a small software developer and publisher focusing on games for Macintosh, though some of its more popular products have been ported to Windows, Linux, and other platforms.-History:...



.

Strategic Conquest allows the player to control modern warfare units and conquer cities. It can be played either by two humans, or with a computer opponent. It also has the capability to be played over an AppleTalk
AppleTalk
AppleTalk is a proprietary suite of protocols developed by Apple Inc. for networking computers. It was included in the original Macintosh released in 1984, but is now unsupported as of the release of Mac OS X v10.6 in 2009 in favor of TCP/IP networking...

 network.

The player's objective in Strategic Conquest is to defeat the enemy and conquer the world. The world is divided into a rectangular grid made up of randomly-placed islands, which contain cities. Cities can belong to either player, or they can be neutral. When controlled by either player, Cities can produce military units. Victory is achieved when all enemy cities have been conquered or when either player surrenders.

Though the game has not been updated since 1998, it is fully compatible with Macintosh System Software
Mac OS
Mac OS is a series of graphical user interface-based operating systems developed by Apple Inc. for their Macintosh line of computer systems. The Macintosh user experience is credited with popularizing the graphical user interface...

 from 6
System 6
System 6 is a graphical user interface-based operating system for Macintosh computers. It was released in 1988 by Apple Computer and was part of the Mac OS line of operating systems. System 6 was shipped with various Macintosh computers until it was succeeded by System 7 in 1991. The boxed...

 to 9
Mac OS 9
Mac OS 9 is the final major release of Apple's Mac OS before the launch of Mac OS X. Introduced on October 23, 1999, Apple positioned it as "The Best Internet Operating System Ever," highlighting Sherlock 2's Internet search capabilities, integration with Apple's free online services known as...

, and is also playable under the Classic environment
Classic (Mac OS X)
Classic, or Classic Environment, was a hardware and software abstraction layer in Mac OS X that allowed applications compatible with Mac OS 9 to run on the Mac OS X operating system...

 included with PowerPC
PowerPC
PowerPC is a RISC architecture created by the 1991 Apple–IBM–Motorola alliance, known as AIM...

 versions of Mac OS X
Mac OS X
Mac OS X is a series of Unix-based operating systems and graphical user interfaces developed, marketed, and sold by Apple Inc. Since 2002, has been included with all new Macintosh computer systems...

 up to Mac OS X v10.4
Mac OS X v10.4
Mac OS X v10.4 Tiger is the fifth major release of Mac OS X, Apple's desktop and server operating system for Macintosh computers. Tiger was released to the public on 29 April 2005 for US$129.95 as the successor to Mac OS X Panther , which had been released 18 months earlier...

.

Game setup

There are four types of games available: one-player games, two-player single-Mac games, AppleTalk master two-player games, and AppleTalk slave two-player games.

When playing a one-player game (created by selecting "Single Player Game" in the setup window), the opponent player is the computer. Since version 3, in one-player games, the player can also select a skill level from one to fifteen to make the game more or less challenging. In harder games, the human player starts with fewer neutral cities nearby to conquer, and taken longer than the computer to produce military units.

The map is a horizontally oriented rectangle divided into a grid of unit-sized rectangles. Measured by playable grid units, the player(s) can choose a map that is small (48 x 32), medium (96 x 64), or large (124 x 96). The top and sides of the map do not 'wrap around
Wraparound (Video Games)
Wraparound, in video games, is a gameplay variation on the single-screen in which space is finite but unbounded; objects leaving one side of the screen immediately reappear on the opposite side, maintaining speed and trajectory...

', i.e., units cannot transit the edges to go from the right to the left side of the map, the top to the bottom of the map, or vice versa.

There are three terrain settings: "wet" (mostly islands), "dry" (land including some bodies of water), and "normal" (mostly larger islands).

Cities

Cities produce units for players. All cities can produce land-based and aerial units, and can refuel aerial units. Only port cities can produce water-based units. If a damaged water-based unit is placed in a port city, the unit will be repaired at a rate of one unit of strength per day, until it is fully repaired.

Units

All units may attack up to two times per turn. If you are playing against the computer you can extend this to however many moves would be left to the unit if you had not attacked by clicking the "W" (wake) key. For example, you move a helicopter (which is allowed a total of ten spaces/moves per day) one space and attack a group of armies, after the two attack moves the unit will deactivate, hit "W" and then click on the unit to reactivate it and attack again (or move away to a safer location) and then do the same for up to six more times (the number of moves remaining for that unit).
Tanks and ships (including submarines) with a strength greater than one suffer a reduction in their number of moves per turn if they suffer sufficient damage in battle but are not destroyed. For instance, a tank with a strength of one has only one move per turn. This is not true of aircraft.










































































































Unit: Tank Artillery Fighter Helicopter Bomber Transport Destroyer Submarine Carrier Battleship
Days to Produce: 4 4 6 8 25+ 8 8 8 10 20
Strength: 2 1 1 1 1 3 3 3 12 18
Attack Range: 1 4 1 1 1+ 1 1 1 1 4
Captures City?: Yes Yes No No No No No No No No
Moves On: Land Land Land/Water Land/Water Land/Water Water Water Water Water Water
Moves/Turn: 2 1 20 10 10 3 4 3 3 3
Fuel: N/A N/A 20 10 30 N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A

Tank

Tanks are relatively weak and do not fare well in battle against other types of pieces but are the speediest land-based units, making them useful for quickly conquering cities.

Artillery

First added in version 4.0, artillery units are slow movers but their attack range (a 9 x 9 grid unit area) lets them attack from a distance and run no risk of suffering damage on an attack, even if attacking a unit directly next to them.

Water-Based Units

Water-based units can only move on water and on port cities. If a damaged water-based unit is in a port city, its strength will be repaired at a rate of one unit of strength per day. If a water-based unit is placed in a city it will defend the city. All water-based units can attack targets on land, except the submarine. 2 water-based units cannot occupy same square, unless inside a city.

Destroyer

With four moves per turn, the destroyer is the quickest of the water-based units and is useful for quickly exploring the outside the range of the aerial units. Its attack is not particularly powerful but it is useful against transports, furthermore it is very effective against submarines as it can see submarines from an adjacent unit square. If damaged in war, it will lose speed and need an extra turn to repair beyond full strength of 3 to regain full speed.

Submarine

The submarine has two outstanding features. One is that its attack is extremely powerful against all water-based units except the destroyer. The second is that it remains hidden to the opponent unless the submarine attacks or the opponent moves directly onto the same grid unit as the submarine. If the opponent does so, the opponent will automatically attack the submarine. This will cost an aerial unit a unit of fuel which can cause the aerial unit to crash if the remaining fuel is insufficient to return to a city or carrier. A bomber hitting a submarine will explode. A patrolling unit passing adjacent to a submarine can always see it.

Transport

The transport's main purpose is moving land-based units across water and, accordingly, its attack power is negligible. It can hold up to eight land-based units at a time. Land-based units on a transport can only attack an adjacent land-based unit or city from a transport; artillery units cannot fire from a transport. Transports are vulnerable to attacks from every other unit and has no offensive capability at all.

When a transport is in a city with land-based units, up to eight land-based units are automatically loaded onto the transport. Thus, if a transport in a city with land-based units is destroyed, the land-based units in the transport will go down with the transport. A transport moving into a city and out again will bring land-based units in the city with it till capacity.

Carrier

With a strength of twelve, the carrier is a strong water-based unit on its own but its main purpose is to carry fighters and helicopters, of which it can hold up to 15 at a time. Fighters and helicopters are also refueled when on a carrier. A carrier with several fighters on board can be an effective way to quickly explore unexplored areas. A carrier moving into a city and out again will bring fighters and helicopters in the city with it till capacity.

Battleship

The battleship is the most powerful sea based unit. With the same attack range as artillery pieces and up to two attacks per turn, it can be used to attack any other units in range. Its high strength makes it difficult to destroy. Placing it in a city is a good way to strengthen city defence.

Aerial Units

Aerial units can move on land or over water but are limited in their movements by the amount of fuel that they carry.

Fighter

The fighter covers the most ground in a single turn of all the units, making it ideal for exploration. It's fighting capacity is not particularly strong but it can often destroy helicopters, transports, destroyers, and submarines. The fighter is not particularly effective against land-based units. Fighters gets veteran status when they have been in battle and increases strength to 2.

Helicopter

First added in version 4.0, the helicopter is an attack aircraft that (somewhat counter-intuitively) does significantly more damage than the fighter. It is especially effective against land-based units and can be used with good effect against transporters and submarines. Helicopters gets veteran status when they have been in battle and increases strength to 2.

Bomber

The bomber is the game's equivalent of an atomic bomb (minus radiation poisoning and nuclear winter
Nuclear winter
Nuclear winter is a predicted climatic effect of nuclear war. It has been theorized that severely cold weather and reduced sunlight for a period of months or even years could be caused by detonating large numbers of nuclear weapons, especially over flammable targets such as cities, where large...

s) and each can only be used once, after which it is destroyed. In this sense, the bomber represents the bomb itself, rather than an aircraft.

Any land-based units, any sea-based units, and those aerial units that are in a city or on a carrier in the blast area are destroyed. Enemy cities in the blast area become neutral, suffer no other damage whatsoever, and can be used to produce units normally by the next player to capture them.

Aerial units that are in the air over the blast area will not be effected. If a bomber attacks another aerial unit, it will attack normally rather than use its bomb. A bomber is not an effective combatant outside of the use of its bomb and is vulnerable to being shot down.

A bomber cannot detonate at will; it must attack an enemy city or an enemy unit that is not an aerial unit.

The blast area of the bomber gradually increases throughout the game. The bomber starts out needing twenty-five days to produce a bomber with a blast radius of zero, i.e., one grid unit. As the number of days to produce increases, the blast radius can be determined by the following formula:

Blast Radius = (Days to Produce - 25) / 5

So if it takes thirty days to produce a bomber, the blast radius will be one, etc. The blast radius gradually increases during the course of the game.

History and development

Strategic Conquest was first developed in 1984 and 1985 on an Apple Lisa
Apple Lisa
The Apple Lisa—also known as the Lisa—is a :personal computer designed by Apple Computer, Inc. during the early 1980s....

 for the Apple Macintosh. The first published version appears to have been in 1984, attributed (incorrectly) to John L. Jamison
. Strategic Conquest was in fact developed by Peter Merrill.

Strategic Conquest had already been released for the Macintosh in 1986
by PBI Software. The Macintosh version was written by Peter Merrill. The game was later acquired by Delta Tao Software
Delta Tao Software
Delta Tao Software is a small software developer and publisher focusing on games for Macintosh, though some of its more popular products have been ported to Windows, Linux, and other platforms.-History:...

, who continued developing the game. The latest version, 4.0.1, was released on February 2, 1998 .

The Apple II version of the game was released in 1986 and the sequel, Strategic Conquest II for the Apple II, was published in 1987
.

Initial Position

Each players starts out with one city. All other cities are hidden and are neutral. The entire map - besides the player's city and the adjacent eight grid units - is black and must be discovered by sending units into it.

The first thing the player must do is choose what unit to produce. The default selection is a fighter, and with good reason; the fighter can quickly explore the surrounding areas.

Turns

The players then alternate turns. A turn is completed when all of the player's units have an order given in a previous turn or have been given orders in the current turn. During the turn, players may also change what units their cities are producing.

Difficulty Levels

The difficulty level is initially set in the range 1-15 and with version 4 the scale has been offset by -2 to allow for 2 new expert levels, so level 8 in version 3 is identical to level 6 in version 4. From level 10, the enemy doubles his production.

Detecting Enemy Units

A fog of war
Fog of war
The fog of war is a term used to describe the uncertainty in situation awareness experienced by participants in military operations. The term seeks to capture the uncertainty regarding own capability, adversary capability, and adversary intent during an engagement, operation, or campaign...

system is used, in that enemy units that are not adjacent to an enemy unit are invisible to the player. Enemy units become visible if they are discovered by the player in the course of his or her turn, until contact is lost and the enemy unit is no longer visible.
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