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Supernova II
from Wikipedia
Supernova II
Other namesSuperNova II
DesignersPeter Donnan and Russel Norris
PublishersRolling Thunder Games
Years active1989 to unknown
Genresscience fiction, play-by-mail
LanguagesEnglish
Playing timeFixed
Materials requiredInstructions, order sheets, turn results, paper, pencil
Media typePlay-by-mail or email

Supernova II (or SuperNova II) is a computer moderated, play-by-mail (PBM) game of space conflict.

History and development

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Supernova II was a play-by-mail game of space conflict designed by Peter Donnan and Russel Norris and published by Rolling Thunder Games.[1] Flagship editor Tim Sullivan called it a "sophisticated space opera".[2] It was released in the U.S. and UK in February and August 1989, respectively.[3] It improved on their initial offering of Supernova.[4] Supernova II was computer moderated, an update from Supernova's hand-moderation.[3] By 2004, Rolling Thunder Games released Supernova III.[5]

Gameplay

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Players custom designed ships for assignment in fleets which could take offensive or defensive actions.[4] Twelve ship types were available.[4] These included: Colonial Transports, Destroyers, Escort Carriers, Explorers, Fast Freighters, Fleet Scouts, Frigates, Heavy Freighters, Heavy Troop Transports, Light Cruisers, Star Destroyers, and Troop Transports.[4] Players selected a race to play as well, a consequential choice for gameplay.[3]

According to Wayne Mohan, "SuperNova is the Commando unit, a small, elite band of your finest" which can explore or accomplish other tasks.[6] Intrigue and diplomacy were elements of gameplay.[6] Both combat between ships and ground combat were possible.[4]

Gameplay in Supernova II was challenging and careful play in the first eight months was critical to success.[7] The editors of Flagship stated that it was "one of the hardest games to play well from turn 1".[3] Rick McFarland put its complexity just below games like Empyrean Challenge.[8]

Reception

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A reviewer in the September–October 1987 issue of Paper Mayhem highly recommended Supernova II, stating it was "an improvement over the original in almost every area".[6] He noted that combat played a greater role and gameplay was challenging.[6] As of November 1989, Supernova II was the highest rated game of 53 listed PBM games in Paper Mayhem.[9][a] In the November–December 1989 issue of Paper Mayhem, Supernova II took 1st place in the Best PBM Game of 1989 list.[10] The game also took 1st place in the magazine's Best PBM Game of 1989 list.[11]

See also

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Notes

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References

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Bibliography

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Further reading

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