Battle Cattle is a light-hearted combat board game published by Wingnut Games in 1997.

Publication history edit

In 1997, Wingnut Games published a Battle Royale miniatures game called Battle Cattle in which players rolled up statistics for warrior cows armed with weapons, and then engaged each other in combat.[1]

In 2001, Steve Jackson Games turned the miniatures game into a card game called Battle Cattle: The Card Game.

Gameplay edit

Players first choose a breed of cow from a list, then generate statistics for the cow to determine Health Points, Weight Allowances, and Tipping Defence numbers. Players can then choose offensive and defensive accessories. After combat starts, the last cow remaining is the winner.[1]

Reception edit

In the January 1997 edition of Dragon (Issue 237), Rick Swan found the game enjoyable, saying, "Despite the udderly stupid premise, it’s a credible miniatures game, albeit one that’s easy to win if you choose the right accessories."[1]

David Wise for Polyhedron called the came "hilarious" and described the gameplay "in which vicious and malevolent sheep must rightfully be blown to smithereens by the PC (and I definitely don't mean 'politically correct') cattle, armed with cattle-pults, s'cud missiles, udder turrets, steak knives, and other weapons of extreme- prejudicial destruction."[2]

Reviews edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Swan, Rick (January 1997). "Role-playing Reviews". Dragon (237). TSR, Inc.: 114.
  2. ^ Wise, David (July 2001). "Ben Con". Polyhedron. Vol. 21, no. 2 #147. p. 63. Retrieved 2023-09-24 – via Internet Archive.
  3. ^ "Backstab Magazine (French) Issue 03".