Copyright (c) 1963 Sid Sackson
This game is played on the following board:
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An example
Black's turn. Black has 4 reserve stones, White has 2. Black position is better, he has more reserve stones than white. He can play a reserve stone at b6 taking that stack. White can attack f2 by moving g3-g2 (f2 cannot move to g2). But black can reply then with b6-f6 protecting his f2 stack. |
An hexagonal variant of Focus is Crossfire with the following extra rule: [author words] "the capacity of a cell equals the number of adjacent cells!" Corners will hold at most a stack of two, sides at most three or five, and cells of the inner area at most six. This gives rise to a strategy not possible in Focus: moving big stacks onto 'low-capacity' cells, corners in particular. Thus considerable numbers of prisoners can be made and reserves created on fixed target cells. In Focus for instance one can never make prisoners, nor create reserves, by moving a stack onto a vacant square. In Crossfire, moving a stack of five onto a vacant corner renders three men.