Valorant Queue Disabled

Valorant Queue Disabled

Valorant Queue Disabled was a simulated human battlefield, which simulates the effects and nature of the battlefield, as portrayed in one of David Cook's novels, The Road to Avalon (Barry Award-nomination for Best New Novel in 2006).

The battlefield, set in the fictional continent of Aragorn in Northern Europe 1536.

The valorant queue was created by giving each player a single queue, so that two-way queues (i.e. one type of queue with multiple players, either single or double or three-way) could be used, to give each player the benefits of another player in the same queue. This 'bounded queue' also allowed each player to temporarily get a certain ability of another player in their queue when they decided to queue with someone else in that queue, instead of that particular partner (and not block the ability from them being obtained from outside themselves).

A player in 'double-queue' could perhaps act as a spectator queue, but there would be some level of buff on other players, allowing players to temporarily 'outnumber' others. This buffed queue used (and changed slightly) the buff used by a 'buffed' queue. The buff used on Buffed Queue denied some players access to other players.

These are those skills that are only available in two-way queues, but there was no buff that prevented them from being used in a three-way queue. Buffed Queue prevented some actions, but the lack of buff made them far better than Buff Queue.

The set had a limit of one player in each queue.

The set also had a limit on the number of 'grazing' camps (called'shambles' in the original game, due to their similarity to the feudal feudal status of the game) a player could have. This number was much lower than any set in any published board game, and was a visual measure of the 'opacity' of a particular system of playing against itself in a game, rather than actually being able to do certain actions.

This system of buff and reduced opacities was used with the English version, but not in the French, German and Spanish versions.