12

In The Resistance the rules state that everyone votes on the team selected by the team leader, and then reveals their votes.

However I was taught by a friend that the votes are randomized by the leader and then revealed to hide who voted what. This second way makes much more sense.

Is this a typo? Has anyone played it both ways?

2
  • 1
    Why do you think the second way makes more sense? There's so little actual information to go on, at least the votes offer something that you can link to a person. Nov 3, 2012 at 1:45
  • I agree with @shujaa. Often, pressing people on why they voted the way they did can out the saboteurs. In fact, that's one of the few ways of doing it!
    – Johno
    Dec 9, 2012 at 13:48

2 Answers 2

17

The rules say to do it without randomizing. This is from official rules (you can find the PDF file here, emphasis is mine):

Mission Team Vote: After appropriate discussion, the Leader calls for a vote on the Team assignments. Each player, including the Leader, secretly selects one Vote Token. When all players have their selected Vote Token ready, the Leader asks for the Votes to be revealed. All players flip over their Vote Tokens so everyone can see how they Voted. The Mission Team is approved if the majority of Votes approved and fails if a majority rejected the assignments; a tied vote is also a rejection. If the Mission Team is approved, play continues in the Mission phase. If the Mission Team is rejected, the Leader passes in a clockwise manner and the Team building phase is repeated.

I actually don't agree with you that the second method makes much sense. You get way more information about the other players if you know how they voted in the past. Is player X always voting No, is he voting yes only if the player Y or himself get selected to the mission team? You wouldn't be able to tell any of that even after few rounds of play, and say, 10+ votes.

Another thing is convincig other players to vote for the team you want - if you know who voted No, then you present good argument why you think they should change their mind, and they got nothing to reply you with, or say that they agree with you... Then everyone will see if they actually changed their minds or only said so, but voted No anyway. If voting is secret, they could just listen to you, vote No anyway, and they say "Hey, I voted Yes, someone else must have changed his mind". And discussion can become dull.

I also think that randomizing votes would make things easier for the spies - they always should vote no (they might just win the round with 5 teams voted down), unless the team selected is perfect for they needs. They would never have to think harder than that, and that seems less fun for me. That's why I would generally be against secret voting, but might give it a try a couple of times. Hope this helps.

If you're interested in the history of the game, I'm sure you can easily see that The Resistance originates from Mafia/Werewolves games. In those games, players openly suggest who to "linch" each day, and voting is (at least in most cases) open for similar reasons. In the prototype version of The Resistance, actually using your thumb down/up was used to vote Yes/No, and this is the way I do it with in my group to this day.

4
  • 1
    +1 Good answer. Just wanted to say that the spies win the game if there are 5 failed votes in a round.
    – tttppp
    Nov 2, 2012 at 17:46
  • @tttppp Yes, you are right, this is the way to win the whole game for the spies, not the round.
    – beam022
    Nov 2, 2012 at 17:55
  • page not found can you send a link again? Jan 21, 2016 at 6:30
  • @User6675636b20796f7521 Thanks for letting me know. I've fixed broken URL.
    – beam022
    Jan 21, 2016 at 13:43
-4

I've been playing Resistance Avalon most of the time and I haven't read through the rules, but when I play the votes are anonymous and it had worked fine for us.

There are roles like Merlin who can use the anonymous vote to signal that there is someone evil on the team, but even when we play with no characters it has worked great. It definitely does give evil an advantage, but I like adding another layer of uncertainty.

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .