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#Strategy
29 pieces on this topic. Browse the full Almanac →
Strategy
When to Refuse a Catan Trade (and What That Signals)
A trade can be mathematically even and still cost you the game. The skill is in noticing when acceptance compounds against you.
Strategy
The Second Settlement: Catan's Most Underrated Decision
The first settlement gets the attention. The second settlement decides the next ninety minutes.
Strategy
The 7-Roll Survival Guide: Discards, Robber, and What to Do at 8 Cards
A bad seven costs you four cards and a hex. Three bad sevens lose you the game. Here is how to take fewer of those losses.
Strategy
Catan Blocking Strategies: When to Cut Off an Opponent
A blocking road is one of the highest-ROI plays in Catan when timed correctly — and one of the most wasteful when not.
Strategy
Catan Comeback Strategies: Climbing Back from a Losing Position
Most "comeback" advice is wish-thinking. These four patterns are the ones that actually work — and only on specific board states.
Strategy
Catan Endgame: Playing the Last Three Victory Points
Catan's endgame compresses ninety minutes of strategy into three turns of card-counting and bluffing.
Strategy
Catan with 3 Players: Why It's a Different Game
Three-player Catan is not a smaller four-player game. It is a different game, and the players who do not adjust lose.
Strategy
Catan Turn Order: Strategy for First, Middle, and Last Position
Turn order in Catan is not equal. The snake draft has a structural winner — and a structural loser. Here is how to play either seat.
Strategy
Pip Counting in Live Play: The Skill That Separates Good From Great
Pip counting is not just for the opening. Played correctly, it changes how you read every dice roll and every trade.
Strategy
Hidden Information in Catan: Counting Cards Without Looking Like You're Counting
Most of what you need to know is in plain sight. Strong players see it. Most players do not.
Strategy
Catan Negotiation: How to Get Better Trades Than You Deserve
Catan is a negotiation game pretending to be a resource game. Players who know that win more often than players who don't.
Strategy
Coastal vs. Inland Catan Settlements: When Each Wins
A coastal settlement looks weaker. Three hexes versus two. But the port economics flip the math more often than players realise.
Strategy
Settling Next to the Desert: When the Dead Hex Helps You
Most Catan guides say never settle adjacent to the desert. Tournament data says: sometimes.
Strategy
When to Upgrade Your Second Settlement to a City
Upgrading a settlement is a one-VP move that costs five resources. The timing matters more than the upgrade itself.
Strategy
When to Trade with the Bank: 4:1, 3:1, 2:1 Decisions
Bank trades feel like surrender. They are not. They are the trade-table backstop that experienced players use deliberately.
Strategy
How to Win at Catan: 15 Strategies from Tournament Players
Most "Catan strategy" guides recycle the same five tips. This one digs into how top tournament players actually play — including the moves they avoid.
Strategy
How to Set Up a Balanced Catan Board: The Math Behind a Fair Game
A "fair" Catan board isn't random — it's a constrained random. Here's the underlying probability math, and why most casual setups are quietly unbalanced.
Strategy
Catan Opening Placements: The 7 Patterns That Win Most Often
Most Catan games are decided in the first sixty seconds. Here are the seven opening-placement patterns that statistically win the most often, with the math behind each.
Strategy
Catan Port Strategy: When 2:1 Ports Actually Pay Off
Half the table thinks every 2:1 port is gold. Half thinks ports are a beginner trap. The math says it's neither — and the answer depends on three specific factors.
Strategy
Catan 5–6 Player Strategy: How the Bigger Map Changes Everything
The build phase changes Catan more than people realise. Here's how 5–6 player strategy actually differs from 3–4, and where the trap moves still are.
Strategy
Catan Robber Strategy: Where to Move It (and When to Steal Away)
Moving the Robber is the most-misplayed micro-decision in Catan. Here's the four-rule framework tournament players use, and why "punishing" never wins.
Strategy
Catan Development Cards: Every Card, Every Best Use
Most players buy dev cards too early and play them too late. Here's a card-by-card breakdown with timing rules from world-championship play.
Strategy
The Psychology of Catan Trading: How to Read the Table
Catan is technically a resource game. Practically, it's a negotiation game. Here's the social toolkit top players use without naming it.
Strategy
Catan Longest Road Strategy: Win It, Block It, or Skip It
Longest Road is the most-misplayed objective in Catan. Half the players chase it lukewarm. Here's the three-mode framework that actually works.
Strategy
Cities & Knights Strategy: The Three-Track Race Explained
Cities & Knights doubles Catan's strategic surface. Here's the three-track race, the knight economy, and how tournament players actually pace it.
Strategy
How to Read a Catan Board: A Visual Strategy Primer
Tournament players spot a board's strengths in seconds. The skill is teachable. Here's the visual checklist they run through.
Strategy
Catan Resources Explained: Which Resource Wins the Most Games?
Wheat and ore get the headlines. The data says one of the other three is the resource you actually want a 7+ pip hex of.
Strategy
The Catan Probability Cheat Sheet (Bookmark This)
A single-page reference for Catan probability — number frequencies, pip values, expected production. Bookmark and consult mid-game.
Strategy
Does Your Catan Color Matter? The Surprising Strategic Edge
Catan colors look cosmetic. The data says they actually do affect win rates — but for placement-order reasons, not the colors themselves.