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Monday 5 December 2011

The Therapy Zone

For A Fistful of Work Units!

    It has been the case that comparisons have been drawn between the Prisoner episode Living In Harmony and the two Spaghetti Westerns directed by Sergio Leone and starring Clint Estwood as "the man with no name," A Fistful Of Dollars and For A Few Dollars More.
   In this the two central characters of both have no name, although in a Fistful of Dollars the stranger played by Clint Eastwood is referred to as "Joe", but this could be due to the fact that the character is an American!
   Both the stranger "the man with no name" in Harmony,    and "the man with no name" as "loners", but they have a very different attitude towards violence and bloodshed. The character of the stranger-No.6 of Harmony has more in common with the 1950's western character of Shane. A man who knows how to use a gun, is fast on the draw, but only takes up the gun when there is absolutely no other alternative. As for "the man with no mane" it has been written that he has but one ethic, and that's money, and lives by the gun. However in a Fistful of Dollars we did see the more compassionate side to "the man with no name" as he reunites a Mexican wife to her husband and young son, giving them the American dollars he seems to value so highly in a bid to help them escape the clutches of the Ramon Rojo. This is the compassionate side to his character which "the man with no name" shares with the stranger in Harmony, in the way he tries to help Cathy escape the clutches of both the Kid and the Judge!

Fancy living in Harmony stranger?

Throw A Six To Escape!

   It was in July 1993 that a "Prisoner Board Game" had finally been launched. So it was with a keen eagerness that I purchased the board game, however I have to admit that I have only ever played this "Prisoner Board Game" once. This because, as No.6, I found it all to easy to escape the village, once having become the "New No.2."
   The game is devised for between 2 and 6 players aged 15 years and over, and is a cross between something like Cluedo and Monopoly, with elements of other popular board games thrown in.
   At the outset each player is issued with "A B & C" cards containing vital information, which is unique to each player, on why he or she resigned, what secret he or she held, and what he or she intended to do next. Plus 35 work units with which to buy "escape tokens" or to pay forfeits.
   The object, quite naturally is to escape from the village, by boat, helicopter or truck, via the Fall Out tunnel. However, you cannot mount an escape attempt until you pick up a full set of "escape tokens" for one of the three routes out of the village.
   The board is made from heavy duty plastic and has to be held down by weights at four corners, otherwise it will simply roll itself up. But is colourfully laid out in red and green, with a black and white background and is faithful to the layout of the real village of Pormeirion.
   Players start from the Pavilion and move around the board in a clockwise direction on the throw of a dice, hopefuly picking up "escape tokens" along the way. You can also land on forfeit circles, in which you miss a go or pay out work units, and "Tally Ho" squares when you pick up "Tally Ho" cards and carry out instructions thereon. These can be favourable, as in collecting extra work units, or unfavourable, such as missing a turn. there is also a "bartering area"  in which players can swop "escape tokens" if desired. However if you land on any of three spots around the board, you become the "New No.2" and move to the Green Dome. As No.2 when your turn comes round , you ask questions of one of your opponents in a bid to discover their "A B and C" secrets. And by a process of elimination, like attempts to discover the murderer and weapon used in Cluedo, No.2 can then attempt, during the course of the game, to expose an opponent by correctly identifying all his or her secrets, thus eliminating him or her from the game.
    Obviously the game works best with four or more players, and can take a couple of hours or more to reach a conclusion, to escape! On the debit, side it is much easier to win the game by eliminating your opponents via the position of the "New No.2" than it is to escape. One other minor criticism of the game is that the "board" could have been laid out better. There are large white areas which could have been better utilised in the design of the game. And the processional route taken by players is somewhat cramped. Plus there are elements of the village which are included on the board but for decorative purposes only, by that I mean they take no active part in the game, which seems to me to be a pity.

BCNU

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