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:''See also: [[Triad]], [[Pyramid (TOS)]]'' | |||
A popular game within Colonial society, possibly team-based, which enjoyed television coverage across the the [[Twelve Colonies]] ([[Mini-Series]]), and also popular aboard Colonial warships ([[Litmus]]). | A popular game within Colonial society, possibly team-based, which enjoyed television coverage across the the [[Twelve Colonies]] ([[Mini-Series]]), and also popular aboard Colonial warships ([[Litmus]]). | ||
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The game is derived from the [[triad]] games played in the original ''Battlestar'' series. | The game is derived from the [[triad]] games played in the original ''Battlestar'' series. | ||
=== | == Notes == | ||
In the [[TOS|original series]], pyramid referred to the poker-like card game often played by the [[Viper (TOS)|Viper]] pilots. This became [[Full Colors]] in the [[TNS|re-imagined series]], and the [[TOS|original series]] game known as [[Triad]] was renamed "Pyramid". This was the result of a mix-up by [[Ronald D. Moore]], as he explains in his [[Kobol's Last Gleaming, Part I|podcast]] for the episode "[[Kobol's Last Gleaming, Part I]]": | |||
<blockquote>...somewhere along the line I transposed the names. I misremembered what they called it and I- the sort of racquet-ball slash basketball game that they played in the original and that we referred to in this series, I now call Pyramid, and the name of that game in the original which was Triad is now what we sort of call our poker game. So it's one of those "Oh, it's one of the charming differences between the old and the new.", it's either that or it's just a stupid error that the writer made.</blockquote> | |||
[[Category: A to Z]] | [[Category: A to Z]] | ||
[[Category: Colonial Society]] | [[Category: Colonial Society]] | ||
[[Category: RDM]] | [[Category: RDM]] | ||
Revision as of 00:59, 2 February 2006
- See also: Triad, Pyramid (TOS)
A popular game within Colonial society, possibly team-based, which enjoyed television coverage across the the Twelve Colonies (Mini-Series), and also popular aboard Colonial warships (Litmus).
The game appears to be a close quarters ball game played on a pyramid-shaped court, hence the name of the game Pyramid. The objective is apparently to score points by getting the ball into a goal at the top of the pyramid. The game appears to be a cross between basketball, rugby and lacrosse. Pyramid can be played one-on-one or in teams. Pyramid is also played professionally, teams like the Caprica Buccaneers are sports heroes akin to modern day professional sports teams. While teams can consist of upwards of eight people it is probable that the sport is played with players rotating on and off the court between plays. The Pyramid court that Starbuck and Anders played on, which was regulation size in spite of it's makeshift layout, didn't look much bigger than a tether ball circle. It is unlikely that it can support up to 16 players at one time. (Resistance)
According to the first issue of The Official Magazine Battlestar Galactica (pp. 28-29), there are versions of Pyramid for one, three or five players from each team on the court at once. The play area is consistantly refered to as an "arena" and the corner with the goal as the "head". Apparently each team starts out in one of the corners besides the head and then vie for control of the ball. The initial ball placement is unspecified, but a face-off is mentioned tangentally later in the article with no details.
Players can take no more than "three paces" without passing, shooting, or rebounding the ball off of one of the walls. The outlined areas in the corners and the center of the arena are "neutral zones". When a player places the ball in these zones, other players must back off and may not make contact (BSG Magazine). This may be a rule somewhat like the NCAA's old "halo" on the declaration of a fair catch of a kick off (speculation).
Full contact is allowed (when the ball is not in a neutral zone), and once a player has been tackled, they must pass the ball (BSG Magazine). How this is handled in one-on-one games is left unspecified. The game is won by the team with the most points at the end (ibid.). However, under what circumstances the games ends is also left unspecified. Perhaps, like basketball, a pick-up game could be played to a certain number of points and professional (or otherwise more official) games have a clock or other timer.
The arena shown in Resistance was apparently designed for "three (on) a side" and, "maybe in a professional area(sic) you would be able to play with up to five people on a side," (BSG Magazine). Whether this implies that this court is built to some specifications other than professional (as High School and Collegate football fields in America have different regulations than NFL fields), or simply that only professionals play with five players on the field is rather hard to determine.
The ball is, "about the size of a cantaloupe," between the sizes of a softball and soccer ball. Apparently the size, combined with the cupped structure of the goal mean that outside (towards the side-lines) shots are quite a bit more difficult than inside (towards the center of the arena) shots. However, the more inside you get, the more defense there will likely be. This is one of the chief reasons the game is so physical: battling over the good shooting space directly in front of the goal (BSG Magazine).
The game is derived from the triad games played in the original Battlestar series.
Notes
In the original series, pyramid referred to the poker-like card game often played by the Viper pilots. This became Full Colors in the re-imagined series, and the original series game known as Triad was renamed "Pyramid". This was the result of a mix-up by Ronald D. Moore, as he explains in his podcast for the episode "Kobol's Last Gleaming, Part I":
...somewhere along the line I transposed the names. I misremembered what they called it and I- the sort of racquet-ball slash basketball game that they played in the original and that we referred to in this series, I now call Pyramid, and the name of that game in the original which was Triad is now what we sort of call our poker game. So it's one of those "Oh, it's one of the charming differences between the old and the new.", it's either that or it's just a stupid error that the writer made.