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Goal: Create a great tourist subway map and score the most points in Paris. If you played Next Station London or Next Station Tokyo, the basics are the same, but there are several differences.
The game is played over 4 rounds, one for each subway line that players are drawing on their map sheets.
During a round, 5-10 cards will be flipped from the common station deck (which comprises 11 cards: 5 with blue and green background, the rest are yellow). Each station card lets each player add a line segment onto their current subway line, if possible (but a player may always pass if they choose). (See below for the construction rules.)
At the end of each round, the subway line each player drew is scored (see below for scoring), the station deck is reshuffled, and players start drawing a new subway line. Best score wins!
Each turn, a card with one of four symbols will flip up. All players will draw a straight line from their starting point to a station with this symbol, following one of the dotted guides on the board. (Note players will see the same symbol, but each has a different starting point.) If a wild symbol flips, you can pick any symbol for that station, and players don't need to pick the same symbol. Also note that drawing a new subway route is always optional; you can skip any flip of a card if you want to.
Continue this way until all five of the cards with blue and green background have been flipped and resolved -- note this means each round will have 5 to 10 turns. When the new round begins, start the next subway line from the next starting point. Keep going until all 4 subway lines have been filled in.
Overhead crossings are where a bridge allows one line to cross over another potential railway line. Only at these points may two lines cross each other. Bonus points are awarded for lines that go through overhead crossings (see scoring).
In the centre of the map is the central station, with all four symbols on it. A line may be drawn to this station whatever symbol is showing on the card.
This wild card permits a section to be drawn to the player's choice of station. If the section goes to a monument, then an additional section may be drawn from the monument to a station of the player's choice.
Typically your new line segment must always continue from the station on either end of your track. However if a Railroad Switch card is drawn, you may draw a new line segment from any station in that round's subway track, possibly producing an additional end to use in a future round. (Note that if the Railroad Switch is flipped first or second, it will have no effect.)
Each line scores separately. To score a line, count the number of districts it passes through. (Districts are regions separated by yellow lines.) Then multiply this by the number of stations visited by this line in one specific district -- whichever district has the most stations for this line. Then add two points for each Parisian monument visited by the line. For example, if a line visits 5 districts, and 3 stations in one district, and visits two Parisian monuments, then that line scores (5 x 3) + 4 = 19 points. Then repeat this same process for each other lines, and add these line scores together.
An interchange is a station that is visited by more than one color line. Each 2 line, 3 line, or 4 line interchange scores 2, 5, or 9 points respectively.
Each level crossing also scores points. 2 points for each level crossing that has one line running through it. 6 points for each level crossing that has 2 lines running through it.
If playing with objectives, each player scores 10 points per objective they completed.
Pastaba: 3D yra eksperimentinis