This week at Flashbak, I remembered the great
3-dimensional board game Sub Search.
Here’s a snippet and the url: (http://flashbak.com/beyond-battleship-remembering-milton-bradleys-sub-search-363554/
)
“Milton Bradley’s Sub Search (1973) is another
board game blast from my youth in the 1970s. It is a “three level Navy strategy
game” intended for ages ten to adult.
The object of the game: “Both surface fleets
search out and sink enemy subs.” One is encouraged to “be the first to sink either the 3 opponent
subs or the 3 opponent surface vessels.”
But there are hazards
for the surface ships to face too, including “mines and torpedoes from the
subs…”
After all these years, I
think the thing I love best about Sub Search is the complexity and size of the
playing board. Fully assembled, it’s a giant blue rectangle. On top is the
ocean surface, where the ships drop depth charges. But below that level are three levels of
oceans, allowing patrolling subs (and destructive bombs…) to go deep. Just imagine if Battleship had three levels
or surfaces of ocean, instead one.
Each player could see
the surface ships, and their own underwater subs, and then had three “grids” by
which to keep track of their guesses regarding enemy sub locations. It’s a complex set-up, and yet game play is
fun and easy.
There’s also a torpedo
launch spinner, and a bin for storing white pegs (indicating a “miss”), and red
peg and red flags to mark hits.
As I wrote in my post about
Stratego, my father introduced me to a number of strategy games in the 1980s
when I was a young teenager. We played Tank Battle, Dogfight, Broadsides,
Stratego, Risk, and Sub Search. Sub
Search was one of the most immersive because of the elaborate, three-dimensional
playing board, and a real upgrade from Battleship...”
Please continue reading at
Flashbak.
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