Hills & Sheep

From Wikicarpedia
Revision as of 00:46, 19 December 2018 by Meepledrone (talk | contribs) (Test separation bars)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Other languages:


Hills And Sheep C2 Box Cover.png

General info and comments


Hills & Sheep was released for the new edition by Hans im Glück in 2018.

This is the ninth major expansion for the base game and introduces some new aspects to the game.

The Shepherds in the meadows throughout Carcassonne wait peacefully until their entire flock of sheep gathers around. However, they have to be careful that a wolf doesn’t show up before they have led their flock safely into the stable. In the hills, you can take control of lands once thought lost. In addition, many a monk is always happy to have a vineyard near his cloister.

Contents

  • 18 land tiles
  • 18 flock and wolf tokens (4x 1 sheep, 5x 2 sheep, 5x 3 sheep, 2x 4 sheep, 2x wolf)
Sheep and wolf Tokens
  • 1 cloth bag
Bag for the tokens
  • 6 shepherds, 1 in each 6 colors
Shepherd figures

Rules

Preparation

Place all of the sheep and wolf tokens in the bag. Give each player (including yourself) the shepherd in their color. Shuffle the new tiles with the other land tiles.

With the exception of the new rules used with this expansion, all basic Carcassonne rules remain unchanged.

Shepherd, sheep, and wolves
float

2. Placing a meeple

After placing a tile with a field, you may choose to either place a meeple as normal or place your shepherd on the field. If you place the shepherd, immediately draw a token from the bag.

Example 1: Placing a shepherd on a newly placed field tile
Example 2: Drawing a token from the cloth bag

If it is a sheep token, place it sheep-side up next to your shepherd in the field.

If it is a wolf token, place it back in the bag and return your shepherd to your supply.

You can place your shepherd even if there is already a farmer in that field (and vice versa), but you cannot place a shepherd if there is already another shepherd in that field. The shepherd is a special figure, not a meeple.


During the game, the shepherd has the following effects:


1. Placing a tile

When you place a tile to expand your shepherd's field, first resolve the action 2. Placing a meeple as normal, then resolve one of the following two actions:

  • Grow the flock (draw another token from the bag)
  • Guide the flock to the stable (score the sheep)

Grow the Flock

Draw a token from the bag:

File:Hills And Sheep C2 Token 3.png 1. If it is a sheep token, your flock grows. Place the token with the other sheep tokens next to your shepherd.
File:Hills And Sheep C2 Token W.png 2. If it is a wolf token, your flock scatters. Return all of the sheep tokens from your field to the bag and return your shepherd to your supply.

Guide the Flock to the Stable

For each sheep token in the field with your shepherd, score points equal to the number of sheep shown on the token. Then, return all of those sheep tokens tothe bag and return your shepherd to your supply.

Multiple Shepherds on One Field

If separate fields with shepherds are later connected, multiple shepherds can be in the same field. All players with shepherds in that field can grow their flock or guide their flock to the stable as normal, but those actions can resolve differently:

  • When a sheep token is drawn, the token is placed as normal. When a wolf token is drawn, all sheep tokens from that field are returned to the bag, and each shepherd on that field is returned to its owner's supply.
  • When a player guides a flock to the stable, all sheep tokens from that field are returned to the bag, and all players with shepherds on that field score points for all of the sheep tokens in that field.
The blue player and you each have a shepherd in the field. The two flocks have 4 sheep tokens with 8 sheep total. During your turn, you expand the field and choose to score the sheep. Both you and blue score 8 points. You return all sheep tokens to the bag.
If you had chosen to grow the flock instead and had drawn a wolf token, all of the sheep in that field would be returned to the bag, and no one would score any points.

Normally to score points for your sheep, you must use the Guide the flock to the stable action.

Exception: If any player completes a field with shepherds and sheep by fully surrounding it by roads and cities, immediately resolve the Guide the flock to the stable action for that field.

You place a tile. You choose not to place a meeple, but you grow your flock. Then, since the tile completed the field, you immediately guide the flock to the stable and score 7 points.


3. Scoring a feature

The shepherd does not score for any other features and is not affected by any other scoring.

Final Scoring

If your shepherd and sheep are in a field at the end of the game, you do not score any points for them.


Hills

1. Placing a tile

If you draw a tile with a hill, immediately take another facedown tile and place it under the hill tile. Do not look at the second tile! Place the hill tile using normal placement rules but keep the facedown tile under it. [1]

Example 1: Placing a tile with a hill


2. Placing a meeple

After placing the hill tile, you may place a meeple on the tile as normal (on one of the features: road, city, monastery, field). You cannot place a meeple directly on the hill itself.


3. Scoring a hill

If you have a meeple on a feature of a hill tile, ties for scoring that feature are broken in your favor. When a feature is scored (road, city, and field), if players are tied for most meeples, check to see if any part of that feature appears on a hill tile. If it does, and if one of the tied players has a meeple on that feature of the hill tile, that player breaks the tie and is the only player who scores points for that feature. Unlike ties without hills, other tied players do not score any points. [2] [3]

Having a meeple on a hill only affects ties when scoring a feature. If there is not a tie, the hill provides no additional effect. After a feature is scored, a meeple on a hill tile is returned to its owner's supply as normal.

Example 2: The blue player and you each have a knight in a city when it is scored. Your knight is on a hill, so you win the tie, scoring 12 points. Blue scores no points.
Final Scoring

Meeples on hill tiles break ties and score points as normal during final scoring (including farmers).


Vineyards

1. Placing a tile

You place a tile with a vineyard as normal.


2. Placing a meeple

After placing the vineyard tile, you may place a meeple on the tile as normal, but you cannot place the meeple directly on the vineyard itself.


3. Scoring a hill

When completing and scoring a monastery, the player who scores points for the monastery scores 3 additional points for each vineyard on one of the 8 surrounding tiles. A single vineyard can score additional points for multiple monasteries.

Example 1: Your monastery is being scored. There are 3 vineyards in the tiles surrounding the monastery. You score 18 points (9 + 3 + 3 + 3) . If the blue player's monastery is completed later in the game, it will also benefit from the vineyard above it, scoring an additional 3 points.
Final Scoring

During final scoring, an incomplete monastery does not score additional points for the surrounding vineyards. [4]


New land tiles

Hills And Sheep C2 Feature Tile 01.png The fields on either side of the two city segments are not connected.
Hills And Sheep C2 Feature Tile 02.png The road from the top and bottom both end at the small house.

Hills And Sheep C2 Feature Tile 03.png This tile has two seperate city segments. If you place a tile with one city segment to the right of it, the city segments become connected.
Example: The tile to the right connects the two previously separated city segments from the tile to the left.
Note: If you place these two tiles next to each other as shown, all of the separate city segments are connected. (The segments of the two tiles are intentionally offset.)

Hills And Sheep C2 Feature Tile 04.png This tile has two separate field segments. If you place a tile with one field segment to the right of it, the field segments become connected.
Example: The tile to the right connects the two previously separated field segments from the tile to the left.
Note: If you place these two tiles next to each other as shown, the two city segments are not connected. The top and bottom fields are also not connected.

Other expansions

This section contains additional information about the interactions with other Carcassonne expansions.

Shepherds, sheep and wolves

  • Exp. 3 - The Princess and the Dragon: The dragon will eat only the shepherd (and that shepherd's flock) on its tile. It will not eat other shepherds from the same field unless it moves onto the corresponding tile. The shepherd is not a meeple, so the fairy cannot be assigned to it.
  • Exp. 4 - The Tower: You cannot capture a shepherd with a tower.

Hills

  • Exp. 5 - Abbey & Mayor: You cannot place an abbey tile under a hill tile. A hill can be part of the tile junction that the barn is placed on, but there is no additional effect.
  • Exp. 6 - Count, King and Robber: You can place one meeple from the city of Carcassonne on a hill tile with a feature that has not been completed. If you do, you gain the benefit of the hill.
  • Exp. 8 - Bridges, Castles and Bazaars: You can place a bridge on a hill tile. You can place a castle (even partially) on a hill tile. If you take a hill tile during a bazaar auction, do not take the facedown tile (to put under the hill) until it is your turn to place the hill tile.

Vineyards

  • Base game - The Abbot: Your abbot can score additional points for vineyards only if the monastery is completed. If you return the abbot before the monastery is completed, you do not score the additional points. If the abbot is placed on a garden, you do not score additional points for vineyards.
  • Exp. 5 - Abbey & Mayor: Abbeys can score additional points for vineyards.
  • Exp. 6 - Count, King and Robber: Shrines can score additional points for vineyards. If there is a challenge, you score the additional points only if you win the challenge.
  • Monasteries in Germany / Japanese Buildings: When using German monasteries or Japanese buildings, the vineyard bonus is applied if the meeple is placed as a monk and the feature is scored as a finished monastery. However, the vineyard bonus is not applied if a meeple is placed as an abbot, as the abbot scores only at the end of the game, when the vineyard has no effect.

House rules

  • If you’re not concerned about whether or not players count tiles as a strategy, and you want to be able to use all of the tiles in the game, you can place blank tiles under any hills that are drawn. (Thanks to Crispy Jones.)

Tile distribution

Total Tiles: 18

Hills And Sheep C2 Tile A.jpg  x1
Hills And Sheep C2 Tile B.jpg  x1
Hills And Sheep C2 Tile C.jpg  x1
Hills And Sheep C2 Tile D.jpg  x1
Hills And Sheep C2 Tile E.jpg  x1
Hills And Sheep C2 Tile F.jpg  x1
Hills And Sheep C2 Tile G.jpg  x1
Hills And Sheep C2 Tile H.jpg  x1
Hills And Sheep C2 Tile I.jpg  x1
Hills And Sheep C2 Tile J.jpg  x1
Hills And Sheep C2 Tile K.jpg  x2
Hills And Sheep C2 Tile L.jpg  x2
Hills And Sheep C2 Tile M.jpg  x1
Hills And Sheep C2 Tile N.jpg  x1
Hills And Sheep C2 Tile O.jpg  x1
Hills And Sheep C2 Tile P.jpg  x1

Total Tokens: 18


Footnotes

For Icons explanation and licensing please visit Icons page.

  1. Official clarification from the publisher If the hill tile drawn is the last tile in the game, the player is still allowed to place it without a second tile underneath. The normal turn (move wood, score features) then takes place. Note that generally a tie break would not be possible with this tile – even if a meeple is placed on it, there will be no way to connect that meeple to an occupied feature, as the game will be over. (10/2014)
  2. Official clarification from the publisher If the tied players also have equal numbers of meeples on hills in that feature, the tie remains unbroken and both players still receive the points. Even if the number of meeples on hills is unequal, as long as each of the tied players has at least one meeple on a hill, the tie is unbroken and both players receive the points. (5/2014)
  3. Common house rule or variant As an alternative tiebreaker method, the number of meeples on hills can be counted. Thus, if two players have the same number of meeples in a feature, but one player has more of those meeples on hills than the other player does, the player with the most meeples on hills gets all of the points and the other player gets none. (5/2014)
  4. Official clarification from the publisher Regardless of the type of monastery involved (normal cloister, abbey, shrine, German monastery or Japanese building), the vineyard has no effect on final scoring at the end of the game. (5/2014)