Star Wars – Rebellion

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“Experience the Galactic Civil War like never before! Control the Galactic Empire or the fledgling Rebel Alliance in an epic, sprawling game of starship command, troop movement and cinematic heroics of iconic characters undertaking vital missions.”

The actions of a handful of men and women shape the course of the Galactic Civil War in Star Wars™: Rebellion, a board game of epic conflict between the Galactic Empire and Rebel Alliance for two to four players.

In Star Wars™: Rebellion, you control the entire Galactic Empire or the fledgling Rebel Alliance. You must command starships, account for troop movements, and rally systems to your cause. Featuring more than 150 plastic miniatures and two game boards that account for thirty-two of the Star Wars™ galaxy’s most notable star systems, Star Wars™: Rebellion aspires to be as large and sweeping as the Star Wars™ universe itself.

Contents include:

  • 1 game board (split in 2 halves)
  • 153 plastic miniatures
  • 25 leaders (with stands)
  • 10 custom dice
  • Over 170 cards
  • 1 Learn to Play Booklet
  • 1 Rules Reference

Playing Time: 3-4 hours

Number of Players: 2 to 4

Age Range: 14+

 

Yet for all its grandiosity, Star Wars: Rebellion remains intensely personal, cinematic, and heroic. As much as your success depends upon the strength of your starships, vehicles, and troops, it depends upon the individual efforts of such notable characters as Luke Skywalker, Leia Organa, Grand Moff Tarkin, and Emperor Palpatine.

You need these leaders in order to attempt the secret missions that shape your war strategy, and the results of their missions blend together to weave a deep and immersive narrative. You might offer Boba Fett a bounty to capture Han Solo, or you might task Wedge Antilles to lead the Rogue Squadron in an attack against an Imperial build yard.

A GAME OF GALACTIC SCOPE AND EPIC CONFLICT

Star Destroyers hover ominously in orbit above worlds with Rebel sympathies. Battalions of Stormtroopers march into battle ahead of AT-AT Walkers and AT-ST Walkers. Rebel strike teams perform surgical strikes against Imperial ship yards. Planets are swept up by the war, and countless numbers of their men and women dedicate themselves to either the Empire or the Rebel Alliance as their resources are used toward the development of new starships and vehicles.

The Galactic Civil War as it is found in Star Wars: Rebellion is fought on multiple fronts. You battle for the loyalty of whole worlds and for their resources. You undertake missions across the galaxy. And, inevitably, Rebel and Imperial forces collide in massed battles for the control of key star systems.

The game is not all about your battles, but they are certainly a key component in any coherent strategy.

To win as the Imperial player, you need to find and destroy the Rebel base. To that end, you need to probe the galaxy’s star systems and move your forces through them. Any time you ever have loyalty or ground units in the same system as the Rebel base, the Rebel player must reveal it. Then, if your units just moved into the system, you engage the Rebels in combat. Wipe out the Rebel forces at the base, and you win.

To win as the Rebel player, you need to draw attention to your cause, earning a reputation for success, and inspiring the people of many worlds to join the fight for freedom. Simply surviving is a key component of your victory plan, but that will not be enough. You will also need to make a number of precise strikes, some of which will necessitate military action.

Mechanically, you have a number of objective cards, each of which is worth a set number of reputation points, and these points push you closer and closer toward tilting the Galactic Civil War in your favor. Interestingly, you do not necessarily need to win your engagements to score these points; many of them reward you just for eliminating specific Imperial forces or a certain number of Imperial forces.

Even when your battles do not immediately determine the fate of the Rebel base or result in more fame for the Rebel Alliance, they can dramatically impact your ability to increase your military and to move unimpeded throughout the galaxy.

Every other round, you gain resources from the worlds that are loyal to your cause. These resources can then be spent to recruit more troops and build more starships and vehicles. If you are the Imperial player, you also gain resources from the worlds that you have subjugated, potentially denying those resources to the Rebel player. And, here, battles can play an important role as the Empire subjugates planets by establishing a military presence on the ground.

Perhaps, as the Imperial player, you don’t want to commit your forces to the subjugation of a planet. In this case, simply destroying it with your Death Star may be a good alternative.

Meanwhile, the galaxy in Star Wars: Rebellion has an actual, physical shape that demands you give thought to your movement through the stars. Adjacent systems are separated by narrow borders, while thicker, orange borders hold together those systems clustered within one of the game’s eight regions. Still, the lack of serviceable hyperspace lanes prohibits direct travel between some systems that would appear to be adjacent, and the red areas between those systems indicate that no direct space travel is possible.

This means that you can anticipate your opponent’s movement through the galaxy and occasionally amass forces in choke points to contest his fleet. As the Rebel, you might give thought to the number of turns the Imperial player would need to spend moving in the right direction before Imperial forces would land at your base. As the Imperial, you need to think about how much you can afford to spread out and how long it would take to reinforce any given position should the Rebels strike.

A GAME OF PERSONAL HEROICS AND CINEMATIC DRAMA

Despite its galactic scope and ambitions, Star Wars: Rebellion is a game, at its heart, that is driven by unique heroes (and villains) and their singular talents. No matter whether you play as the Empire or the Rebel Alliance, everything you do ties back to your leaders.

  • If you want to attempt a mission, you need to attempt it with a leader.
  • If you want to move your military forces, you need a leader to direct them.
  • If you want to oppose your opponent’s efforts at a mission or during combat, you need a leader at the ready.

Both the Imperial and Rebel players begin the game with four leaders available to them:

The Galactic Empire starts with Emperor Palpatine, General Tagge, Grand Moff Tarkin, and Darth Vader.

The Rebel Alliance starts with Mon Mothma, Jan Dodonna, General Rieekan, and Princess Leia.

These are not the sum of your possible leaders, however. You will also be able to recruit more leaders over the course of your game, including such notable characters as Luke Skywalker, Lando Calrissian, General Veers, and Soontir Fel.

All these characters come with unique talents, derived from their assortment of skill icons and their tactics values, providing them with distinctive strengths and weaknesses, and making them better at some missions and worse at others. Likewise, some of your leaders are better in combat than others, and their combat utility may even depend upon whether your engagement is primarily a space battle or a ground battle.

Accordingly, as much as it’s a game of fleet battles and hidden bases, Star Wars: Rebellion becomes a game about personal strengths and destinies. And as your leaders attempt their secret missions, it also becomes a game about cinematic adventure.

Even at those times when you have no hope of winning a straight-forward military engagement as the Rebel player, you may still be able to sabotage a planet’s resources, denying them to the Empire, and you can strike against their forces in other ways, as well.

The adventures you enjoy as your leaders undertake their missions may take all different shapes, but there is a distinct asymmetry between the missions belonging to the Galactic Empire and those belonging to the Rebel Alliance. Just as the two factions have different win conditions and wildly different military presences on the board, the game’s missions reinforce the ideas that the Galactic Empire is a massive, tyrannical force that rules by fear while the Rebel Alliance is a severely overmatched military organization that must rely upon stealth, subterfuge, and sabotage.

For example, the Imperial player might assert its influence over a star system with a Display of Power , but the Rebel player might respond by completing the Sabotage mission to ensure the Galactic Empire does not win the system’s valuable resources.

 

You will even find that many of your missions feature an image of a single leader. While you can attempt these missions with any of your leaders, if you attempt them with the matching leaders, you improve your chances of success should your opponent oppose your efforts. Some of these missions, like Seek Yoda and Probe Droid Initiative , even offer greater rewards for completing them with the matching leaders.

Finally, just as the heroes of the classic Star Wars trilogy were able to overcome tremendous odds – with skill, or luck, or through the use of the Force – your leaders in Star Wars: Rebellion add an extra spark to your battles.

Whenever your forces engage in combat in a system or at a planet where you have a leader, you can draw a number of tactics cards indicated by that leader’s tactics values. These tactics cards then present you with opportunities to alter the course of your space or ground battles.

  • As your Rebel X-wings and Y-wings battle a Star Destroyer and several TIE fighter squadrons, Wedge Antilles might score a Critical Hit to the Star Destroyer that allows you to Take It Down.
  • Or as General Veers marches toward a Rebel encampment in his AT-AT Walker and followed by a battalion of Stormtroopers, his forces might Concentrate Fire on the opposing Airspeeders to ensure that all of the Rebels fall before his Unstoppable Assault.

Ultimately, while Star Wars: Rebellion is in many ways a game about galactic conquest, dominion, and logistics, it is also a game about the dramatic ways that a handful of individuals can affect the fates of countless lives.

IT IS A PERIOD OF CIVIL WAR…

In Star Wars: Rebellion, your games will span multiple star systems. Many fighters will be lost. Many troopers will fall. Planets will join the Alliance before they are overrun by the Empire and subjugated. Imperial officers may capture Rebel spies and interrogate them for valuable information. A hotshot Rebel pilot may land a one-in-a-million shot against the Death Star and destroy it.

Devise your strategy, and decide the final fate of the galaxy. Will you clamp it down under the rule of your tyrannical Empire? Or will your rag-tag Rebel Alliance and your handful of heroes lead the worlds to freedom?

Brand

Fantasy Flight Games

GTIN

841333101053

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