My opinion of Eclipse has deteriorated since I first learned about it in college. Back then, it had just come out, and I was excited at the prospect of a shorter Twilight Imperium with more streamlined mechanics. The part that most intrigued my inner designer was how it dealt with income – you removed cubes from a track to place them on a board, and the number uncovered was how much you got to collect. This practice is commonplace nowadays, but it was innovative at the time. I bought the game along with its expansion and played it extensively with my friends.
I revisited Eclipse a few years ago and found that it did not live up to my memories of it. In particular, I found myself much more aware of how arbitrary so much of it is. Exploring is costly, and the quality of the systems you encounter varies widely. Combat is a dice fest. But the most obvious way in which the game feels random is the reputation tile mechanics.
When you fight in Eclipse, whether you win or lose, you are rewarded with randomly drawn “reputation tiles” – which my friends and I abbreviated to “reptiles” to the frequent confusion of new players. These are worth some number of victory points between one and four, and the value of the tiles you own is secret. You can only hold a limited number of tiles and eventually discard lower-value tiles to make room for more valuable ones.
The reasons behind this system make sense. Because there are only a limited number of high-value tiles and players are trading up to them, players want to fight early. Because the value of the tiles is secret, players can’t be sure what anybody’s total score is, obfuscating the current leader. Succeeding in battle is also incentivized because you draw more tiles and choose one to keep.
Statistically, reputation tiles work. In practice, they lead to feel-bad moments where you draw a low tile by chance and feel cheated. The problem isn’t just with Eclipse, either. In general, when you distribute random amounts of victory points to players for the same actions, you make it easier for players to attribute their successes or failures to luck rather than their hard work.
The risk of unfairness may be why randomized point distribution of this sort is uncommon in board games. But such mechanics have undeniable benefits. We do not want players to know who has won the game until the end, and hidden victory points that nobody else knows about are great at confusing the issue. So how do we give players random victory points without making success feel arbitrary?
One of the principles I hold to in game design is that when bad things happen to a player, there should be a silver lining for them to see. My favorite example to point to is Imperial Settlers, where whenever another player destroys one of your buildings, you get one wood and a foundation that you can sacrifice to build something else. The foundation isn’t technically a benefit – after all, you could have used the building you had before the attack as a foundation already. But psychologically, it feels like a silver lining because it makes one of your choices – which card to give up – easy to make.
We can use this same principle to fix the reputation tile problem. What if you could spend reputation tiles and the value of the tile didn’t matter? For example, imagine a game where you transport cargo drawn at random from four different point values. However, during the game, you can burn unwanted tokens to move faster. The amount of the boost is independent of the point value of what you spent. (Note: This is basically how the Reactor Furnace in Galaxy Trucker works, though there the cargo isn’t drawn randomly)
In this scenario, drawing low-point tokens does not feel unfair. It is sometimes even a relief because it simplifies the player’s decision of what to do. Draw some worthless scrap? Burn it! Yet hidden tokens still serve to obscure a player’s point total. A player might choose not to burn cargo because it is valuable, or they might think they can win without doing so.
I think hidden randomized victory points can work without feeling arbitrary, and I think the key is giving players ways to convert the less valuable ones into something useful.