Depending on the number of cards (here is was 5) you fill the A, B, C, D and E spaces. Then you flip the A and B to have already visibility on part of your hand. Then you roll a dice and more possibilities will come; the idea is that you do not know the full hand of any side - so you cannot predict everything. You can check the details here: gmtwebsiteassets.s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/CDG_SoloSystem/CDG_Solo_System_Rules.pdf
This is how CDG solo system works - depending on the number of cards in hand (usually 4, 5, or 6) you will see at the beginning only some to limit your solo choices; once you roll a dice, a new choice may occur and you need to select from possibilities.
Thank you for the video. I enjoyed the playthrough. Love how it came down to two units battling for the scenario victory.
Thank you for kind words; indeed, that one was very tense and close!
Thanks Michael, I haven't got to use my copy of CDG yet so enjoyed watching this playthrough.
Cheers
Thanks! Hope you will have as much as I did!
Beautiful tutorial. can you explain the set up cdg solo?
I don’t understand the initial cards
Depending on the number of cards (here is was 5) you fill the A, B, C, D and E spaces. Then you flip the A and B to have already visibility on part of your hand. Then you roll a dice and more possibilities will come; the idea is that you do not know the full hand of any side - so you cannot predict everything. You can check the details here: gmtwebsiteassets.s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/CDG_SoloSystem/CDG_Solo_System_Rules.pdf
why there are at the first 3 card hidden and 2 not? I don’t understand this.
This is how CDG solo system works - depending on the number of cards in hand (usually 4, 5, or 6) you will see at the beginning only some to limit your solo choices; once you roll a dice, a new choice may occur and you need to select from possibilities.
@@mk20336 thanks a lot