Rescue from the Hive

Last updated

Ares Issue #7, featuring Rescue from the Hive Cover of Ares magazine issue 7.png
Ares Issue #7, featuring Rescue from the Hive

Rescue from the Hive is a science fiction board game published by Simulations Publications, Inc. (SPI) in 1981.

Contents

Description

Rescue from the Hive is a 2-player game set in the future. Radical alien Znons have kidnapped Terran Ambassador Helstrom with his daughter Athena and are now fleeing with the captives in their spaceship. One player uses a squad of Space Marines from Earth to attempt to rescue the hostages, while the other player uses Znon defenses to try to stave off the Marines until the alien ship can engage its hyperdrive and escape. [1]

Rules are also included for solitaire play, with the player running the Space Marines, and the Znon defence run by automatic rules. [1]

Components

Setup

Each player spends a specified number of points on their forces. The Terran player can buy scouts, engineers, two-person lancer units, and up to six Darter space ships. The Znon player always starts with the Master Queen, seven other Queens and the two hostages, and can buy additional soldiers, workers, traps, and fake traps. The Znon player can also spend points to reduce the number of turns until the Znon ship can engage its hyperdrive to escape.

The Znon player then places all the Znon counters on the ship map facedown, with at least one Queen in each nesting area. The Master Queen can be placed anywhere on the map, but the two human hostages must accompany the Master Queen.

Objective

Once the Terran player sees the Znon setup, the Terran player makes an irrevocable choice of objective:

Gameplay

The game lasts a set number of turns. If the end of the last turn is reached, the Znon successfully engage their hyperdrive and escape. [1]

The game begins with the Darters ships closing in. The Znon player has one round to fire lasers at the Darters before they attach to the Znon ship's hull, trying to eliminate individual Terran units or even an entire Darter.

The Terran player chooses where the Darters will attach to the hull, which can be next to any empty space on the map. The Terrans move into the ship, and turn over Znon counters as they encounter them, engaging in combat or trying to destroy traps. As Znon Queens become activated, they can attempt mind control of Terran units, in addition to standard combat.

If the Terrans rescue the hostages and get them to a Darter, the Znon player still has one last chance to destroy the rescue ship with laser fire, if the lasers are still functioning.

Victory conditions

In either scenario, the Znon player wins if the game reaches the end of final turn, enabling the Znon to engage their hyperdrive and escape.

Publication history

Rescue from the Hive was designed by Nick Karp, with graphics and artwork by John W. Pierard and Redmond A. Simonsen, and was published as a pull-out game in Issue 7 of Ares . [2]

A Polish-language boxed set of the game titled W imieniu Ziemi (On Behalf of the Earth) was published in Poland by Encore Games. [3]

Reception

In Issue 48 of The Space Gamer (February 1982), David Ladyman thought this to be an average game, saying "SPI continues to produce an attractive, playable game every other month, in Ares . None of these games is likely to set the world on fire, or even produce lasting interest, but so far, they tend to be consistent diversons. RFTH is another from that mold. On the other hand [...] I get the impression that no one had his heart in this game. SPI has committed itself to cranking out an SF/fantasy game every two months, whether it has one ready or not. Having said this last, let me repeat that, for the most part, they have succeeded with RFTH. If you enjoy the premise, you'll probably enjoy the game." [1]

The Polish website Tanuki Czytelnia (The Tanuki Reading Room) reviewed the Polish-language version of the game, and found the game "quite dynamic, provided you master the rules, which is difficult for the beginning player." While the game was judged to be "a solid game", the solitaire rules were the only feature that distinguished this from other games published by Encore. [3]

Other reviews

Related Research Articles

<i>Starship Troopers</i> (board wargame) Science fiction board wargame published in 1976

Starship Troopers is a board wargame by Avalon Hill based on the 1959 novel of the same name by Robert A. Heinlein. It was originally released in 1976 and designed by Randall C. Reed. Twenty years later, Avalon Hill redesigned and re-released a "movie" version in 1997 to coincide with the movie's release.

Natural Selection is a modification for the video game Half-Life. Its concept is a mixture of the first-person shooter and real-time strategy game genres. The game was created by Charlie "Flayra" Cleveland, who later founded the company Unknown Worlds Entertainment. Natural Selection v1 was first publicly released on Halloween 2002, and is now at version 3.2. Natural Selection 2 was released in late 2012.

Renegade Legion is a series of science fiction games that were designed by Sam Lewis, produced by FASA, and published from 1989 to 1993. The line was then licensed to Nightshift games, a spin-off of the garage company Crunchy Frog Enterprises by Paul Arden Lidberg, which published one scenario book, a gaming aid, and three issues of a fanzine-quality periodical before reverting the license.

<i>Aliens Versus Predator 2</i> 2001 video game

Aliens Versus Predator 2 is a science fiction first-person shooter video game developed by Monolith Productions and co-published by Fox Interactive and Sierra On-Line for Microsoft Windows in October 2001, and for Mac OS X in July 2003. The game is a sequel to Aliens Versus Predator (1999); both games are based on the characters of the Alien and Predator media franchises as well as the Alien vs. Predator crossover series. It is set on the fictional planet LV-1201, which houses a vast series of ruins infested with Aliens that is routinely visited by a clan of Predators who hunt the creatures for sport.

<i>Imperium</i> (board game) Science fiction tabletop wargame

Imperium is a science fiction board wargame designed by Marc W. Miller, and published in 1977 by the Conflict Game Company and Game Designers' Workshop (GDW). It features asymmetrical forces, each of the two sides having its unique set of constraints. The game came in a cardboard box illustrated with a space battle on the exterior. It included a cardboard-mounted, folding map of a local region of the Milky Way galaxy, a set of rules and charts, and the 352 counters representing the various spacecraft, ground units, and markers, and a six-sided die. A second edition was published in 1990, a third in 2001, and the first edition republished in 2004.

<i>Space Empires IV</i> 2000 video game

Space Empires IV is a turn-based 4X strategy computer game developed by Malfador Machinations and published by Strategy First as part of the Space Empires series in which players control an alien race in an attempt at galactic conquest.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Revolt On Antares</span>

Revolt On Antares is a science fiction themed microgame designed by Tom Moldvay and produced by TSR, Inc. in 1981. Similar to the microgames produced by Steve Jackson Games, it was sold in a transparent plastic shell case and came with rulebook, full-color hex-map, counters, and one six-sided die. Other games in this series include They've Invaded Pleasantville!, Remember the Alamo, Attack Force, Vampyre, Viking Gods, Icebergs and Saga.

<i>StarForce: Alpha Centauri</i> Science fiction board wargame published in 1974

StarForce: Alpha Centauri, subtitled "Interstellar Conflict in the 25th Century", is a science fiction board game published by Simulations Publications Inc. (SPI) in 1974. It was the first mass-market science fiction board wargame, and was a best-seller for SPI.

<i>Warhammer 40,000: Dawn of War II</i> 2009 video game

Warhammer 40,000: Dawn of War II is a real-time strategy-tactical role-playing video game developed by Relic Entertainment and published by THQ for Microsoft Windows based on the fictional Warhammer 40,000 universe. It is the sequel to the Warhammer 40,000: Dawn of War video game series. Dawn of War II was released in North America on February 19, 2009 and in Europe on February 20, 2009. A sequel, Warhammer 40,000: Dawn of War III, was released in April 2017.

<i>Dallas</i> (role-playing game) 1981 tabletop role-playing game

Dallas: The Television Role-Playing Game is a role-playing game created by the wargame publisher Simulations Publications, Inc. (SPI) in 1980 based on the popular television soap opera Dallas. The game was an attempt by debt-ridden SPI to find a new audience, but it was "a massive failure, one of the biggest in the history of RPGs" and also succeeded in alienating SPI's wargaming clientele.

<i>BattleFleet Mars</i> Board wargame

BattleFleet Mars, subtitled "Space Combat in the 21st Century", is a science fiction board wargame published by Simulations Publications, Inc. (SPI) in 1977 that simulates combat in the inner Solar System.

<i>Vector 3</i>

Vector 3 is a science fiction combat microgame published by Simulations Publications, Inc. (SPI) in 1979.

<i>Berlin 85</i>

Berlin '85, subtitled "The Enemy at the Gates", is a battalion-level board wargame published by Simulations Publications, Inc. (SPI) in 1980 that hypothesizes an attack on West Berlin by the Warsaw Pact.

<i>Voyage of the B.S.M. Pandora</i>

Voyage of the B.S.M. Pandora, subtitled "Adventures on Unknown Worlds", is a solitaire science fiction board game published by Simulations Publications, Inc. (SPI) in 1981.

<i>Galaxy On Fire 2</i> 2010 video game

Galaxy On Fire 2 is a spaceflight simulation video game created and distributed by Fishlabs in 2009.

<i>Last Alert</i> 1989 video game

Last Alert is a single-player top down shooting game developed by Sin-Nihon Laser Soft. It was released in Japan in 1989 and North America in 1990 for the TurboGrafx-CD. The story is that of a lone soldier whose unit has been wiped out who has been tasked by the CIA to take down an international criminal syndicate.

<i>Spies!</i> Board game

Spies! is a board game published by Simulations Publications, Inc. (SPI) in 1981 that simulates international espionage in Europe in the years leading up to World War II.

<i>Dragonslayer</i> (board game) Board game

Dragonslayer is a board game published by Simulations Publications, Inc. (SPI) in 1981 that is based on the movie of the same name.

<i>Battle Over Britain</i> Board game

Battle Over Britain is a board wargame published by the SPI subsidiary of TSR in 1983 that simulates the Battle of Britain.

<i>1812: The Campaign of Napoleon in Russia</i>

1812: The Campaign of Napoleon in Russia is a collection of two board wargames published by Simulations Publications Inc. (SPI) in 1972 that both simulate Napoleon's disastrous invasion of Russia. One game uses a traditional hex grid map, and the other uses a map of areas and regions.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Ladyman, David (February 1982). "Capsule Reviews". The Space Gamer (48). Steve Jackson Games: 28–29.
  2. 1 2 3 "Rescue from the Hive (1981)". boardgamegeek.com. Retrieved 2021-10-18.
  3. 1 2 "W imieniu Ziemi - recenzja gry". Tanuki Czytelnia (in Polish). 2013-06-22. Retrieved 2021-10-18.