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Divided Republic Board Game First Impressions

Divided Republic is a card-driven, area control game based on the 1860 Presidential Election.

Come on the South!

The presidential election of 1860 was one of the most critical in the history of the United States. With civil war looming as a near inevitability, the challenge was to find a way forward after years of degenerating political discourse in the increasingly divided American electorate. In the end, after months of contentious campaigning between four (!) major parties and over a dozen smaller ones, the election was won by the Republican dark horse candidate, a little known Illinois politician named Abraham Lincoln who hadn’t even been the first choice of his party’s senior leadership.

Each player is given a party to control with the goal of the game is to win the 1860 election.

To win Divided Republic, you need to try and get 153 votes to get the majority.

This tells you everything you need to know…

States and Votes

Each state is worth a number of votes in the game. The smaller states are worth between two and eight votes whereas the larger states such as New York will give you 35 votes.

You get those states by controlling them. You control them when you have a number of cubes in the State meeting the number required to control it.

So you add cubes to states by playing cards, they are to be used for two different things. In the top left of the card, there is a number and this is the number of cubes to a state. At the bottom of the card is an ability that you can play which will do various things.

The abilities on these cards are highly thematic and quite historically accurate. They are things such as speeches by various people that will cause an effect to happen on the board that would’ve been similar to what actually happened in 1860.

These are things like making a speech, or effects that referred to actual events that happened at the time.

Polls

Eventually, somebody will play a card that causes a poll. This is where you are given a mini card to represent the state you control when you have a majority of cubes in that state. This is very much an area control/area majority game.

If you have twice as many cubes on a state as required during the Poll in that area you get to lock that state out. That means nobody else will be able to add cubes in that state for the rest of the game.

Divided Republic Game End

The game lasts for six rounds with each player playing five cards each round. At the end of the game, you poll every state on the board to make sure the players controlling it has the mini card that represents that state.

Each player then adds all the votes they have and if a player has 153 they win the game.

If no one has won Divided Republic, the player with the fewest votes is eliminated and cannot win. In this case, the player with the most states wins.

Divided Republic Summary

This was a very enjoyable and educational game. It’s one of those games that is very very easy to play yet still has a lot of strategies.

Blue, Red and Green Battle for the North East

We played with the full four players and I think that is the only way to play.

Game designer Andrew Parks said ‘A game is mathematics plus emotion’, this is very much the case here.

While my opponents battled for the higher value states in the northeast or the upper South, I locked out the complete South and West of the board so even though I have the third most votes at the end, I had worked out I had enough states to win.

Divided Republic is a very enjoyable game.

Jesta ThaRogue

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Divided Republic Board Game First Impressions
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Divided Republic review
Jesta ThaRogue
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