
NOTE #2: I should also point out that there are important notes on the opening page the app (when you start a new game) that players should read. If that ever happens, use this link: - This link will reset the entire app (note you will lose any game in progress). NOTE: Since the app has some complex logic, and saves as-you-go, you may run across a bug that crashes the app and you can't start a new game. If you try the app out and have a problem, note what you were doing, what problem you came across, and post to the BGG thread or reply to this thread. Some bugs may be able to be fixed and let you continue your game.

I've found it works well, but that's my opinion. It works really well and fast on phones, and avoids any copyright issues for graphics. So I decided to work on my favorite game! I needed some coding projects to work on as part of work on an online course I am designing. Auto-saves as you go, so you can refresh your browser or open/close it without losing your game. Automated turn order each round (normal Brass: Birmingham turn order rules are respected, and the app shows you how much money each player is spending as the round progresses). Automated victory point tracking and scoring. Currently the app has only one "personality deck type" for the AI, but others will be added (open to suggestions) which can affect how the AI plays by changing the balance of location and industry cards that it draws. A "view board state" link at the top that lets you compare the app's understanding of what the board should look like with your physical board as a double-check (all text-based, no graphics). A single level undo feature in case you make a mistake. The app, whenever possible, shows you only potentially legal moves to minimize options you have to scroll through. It tells you in plain english what each AI move is (you can check them off as you go, to make sure you don't forget anything). The app walks you through setting up the board and players. You need to keep track of your own money and income. It also keeps track of the player boards, so you don't necessarily have to set those up for the AI (you just need the tiles).

The app keeps track of all victory points, scoring the board and merchant beer bonuses for you. There is no AI to learn, you just use the app. To play Brass: Birmingham solo, against 1 or 2 AI opponents, as fast as possible. The logic for the app comes from my physical solo variant, Eliza. It is all text based, and works on mobile devices. You tell the app what you are doing as you do it, and the app tells you what the solo players do. You can find the beta version of the solo app here: Ī web app for playing the physical Brass: Birmingham game solo. I'm pleased to announce the release of a beta version of an app I've been working on for some time: a web app providing automated solo opponents for a 2 or 3-player game of Brass: Birmingham. NOTE: This is a re-post, the original thread is on BGG here. Multi-part content should be either spaced out following the no spamming rules or consolidated into one post.Don't use abbreviations in the title of your posts.If you only submit your content and never interact with our sub, we may also consider this spamming.
:strip_icc()/pic3733950.jpg)
Selling or trading used games in comments is allowed with strict infrequency (once in a while, naturally in conversation).#bbbathysphere - Submit to the general discussion thread only!.

