Junta

Junta

Junta

Publisher: ASS

Author: Vincent Tsao (original design); Ben Grossman / Eric Goldberg (revised
rules)

Tested: German edition, 1986

Tester: Walter Sorger

Scenario: A Republica of Los Bananas somewhere in the world. The players
represent political powers within a state and try by hook or by crook to divert the main
part of the public budget to their own private Swiss bank account.

The Game: The game board shows the important political quarters of a modern
capital (presidential palace, parliament, police districts, barracks, embassies, central
bank etc.). The game takes 9 to 11 rounds, in each round cash is put into circulation.
When the whole stock of money is exhausted the game is over. Winner is the player with
the highest amount of money in his bank account.

One player is El Presidente, an office in which he is elected democratically. The
president assigns the remaining 6 positions (Ministry of Internal Security, Air Force,
Navy or one of 3 Generals) to the other players. He is free in his decision, each player
gets at least one and at most two offices.

This demonstrates the first partiality of the president. The president assigns the
positions not uniformly among the players, but prefers those, who seem to be loyal; those
player with which he attempts to feather his nest.

His “feathers” are the randomly drawn 8 to 24 million Pesos Foreign Aid,
which form the public budget. The president distributes this money amongst all the
players in an absolutely arbitrary manner. He may keep all the cash for his own or he may
give all or part of it to one or several other players. This demonstrates the second
partiality of the president and is called his budget proposal. It is voted on, and of
course the hurt players vote against it. If the budget passes, it is divided up amongst
the fortunate players. If it fails, the Minister can force it through with gun power.

Such a proceeding does not make friends. But Junta is not a game for friends.
Everybody plays at his own bill. Alliances are concluded for short-dated aims only, and
they last only so long as no other profitable goals are found. These may be an
assassination attempt against a rich ally or a coup attempt against the governing
junta.

Any player may initiate an assassination attempt against one other player. This
happens by ordering an assassin to a specific location (bank, head quarter, home, lover,
night club) to kill the denominated office person. The assassination attempt is
successful, if the wanted person really moves to the chosen location. In this case the
agent gets all the cash on hand of the victim.

A coup attempt may be initiated by any player. Before the coup starts each player must
declare whether he chooses the rebel or the loyalist faction. Thereupon is a little war
game, consisting of 6 turns, in which each side struggles to gain control over the
majority of the 5 ‘key’ areas of the capital. After the appropriate number of
turns the coup is terminated and the result is counted.

If the coup is successful, the declared rebels vote on a new El Presidente. If the
coup fails, the governing junta remains in power. The winning side can execute one
person. An executed victim looses all his collected political influence and the president
gets the cash in his hand.

The money the players get during the game doesn’t count for the winning balance at
the end of the game. To determine the winner, only the money on the Swiss bank account is
evaluated. And how do you manage to it get there? In going to the bank and crediting your
cash to your Swiss account. This sounds quite simple, but it isn’t. In political
turbulent times the bank is closed or takes lunch hour and is inoperable for your
transaction. Additionally the assassins lie in ambush in the bank, and there is no more
lucrative target than a partner with much cash.

Playing time: 3 hours, plus rules explanation

Similar games: Republic of Rome, Kreml, Risiko

Westpark Gamer’s Opinion: As preparation for a junta session the game
instructions give the advice to write 100 times “Junta is only a game”. This a
very useful advice because Junta is really only a game. A good game – for good players,
permitted for players over 18 years (like love). It is an ingenious transformation of the
political intrigues in a Republica of Los Bananas into a game scenery. You need sense of
humour (and esprit) to enjoy the immorality and anarchy of this outlined society. Your
companion in storming the president’s palace immediately points to you to be executed
after his election for president, if your are worth to be inherited. Such is life.

The mechanisms of the game are mature and well proportioned, even if fortune (the
president) may distribute the wealth of the state very inequitably. The player, who
obviously was favoured by fortune is immediately a target of the envy. He is closer to
the brink of death than the harmless ‘have-not’, who may gain sudden richness by
committing an assassination or a rebellion.

And how do you win this game? Peter tried it as president with psychical pressure,
with terror against everybody – and often he was successful. Moritz trusted in the
Minister of the Internal Security; in this position he may commit one additional
assassination attempt per round. I don’t know (exactly) which are the principles of a
winning strategy. I dream of a great coup de main, a screened waiting for the
opportunity, where my turn is the last and I can assassinate a rich play mate, who just
assassinated a rich mate … . And this of course in the bank, where I can immediately
move all my booty to my Swiss account, before I have no chance to do this against the
joined gang in the next round. For this I must be able to determine the turn order. And
for this I have to be president and nominate the player left to me as Minister of the
Internal Security …

Walter’s Rating: 9 (out of 10), because of the ingenious mapping of a junta
democracy.

Westpark Gamers Rating: 8.8

Links to further information: Bruno Faidutti’s “Junta” Review
Funagain web page about “Junta”
Luding Link to “Junta”