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Повідомити про проблему з перекладом
If/when you've built your initial routes, look at how many trains everyone has left, what you've got in your hand, how extensive your rail network is, and how crowded the rest of the board is. Looking at this will tell you whether to draw more routes. If people are at 20+ trains, you almost surely want more routes, but you might also take routes if you're already in a lot of cities or you have great cards, since that'll make it a lot easier to complete them. I often get 1-2 routes worth of free points by drawing routes I've already completed, or only need to lay down 1-2 small sections of track for.
Also, it helps to play against the NPCs if you just want a relaxing game where you don't have to think too much. Humans are much smarter and more unpredictable. ;D
I found the best way to get a higher score is the hoard cards and claim the long routes. For example in one of my highest scoring games I only took 2 ticket cards and planned my whole route around the longest connections. Ended up getting the longest route card and I was in the 180s.
Strategy changes every game based on how early people are claiming routes and how the cards fall. 1 route can be the deciphering point in having the highest scoring game or the lowest scoring game.
The general idea of TTR is that you build the best routes for your tickets.
By that, what I mean is, if you know what tickets you don't have, and notice that your opponents don't have them either, build (in your track) ways to get those tickets later in the game. For example: I'm trying to finish LA-NY and Seattle-NY. Now, i could go up to Toronto and across to Seattle, but this isn't the most useful way to do it. Claim Seattle-Portland, then build down, go across the middle, through Denver, Kansas City, up to Chicago, then Pittsburgh... Oh, hello, Denver-Pittsburgh is completed even though you don't have it? Draw tickets when you've finished your first ones.
You need to know what tickets there are in the game.
You will find, that if you play your trains in a way that they (initially) complete your first tickets, but later happen to fall into place as other routes, points will fall into your lap.
I will note, this does involve you taking routes you may not need in order to 'just in case'.
For example here, Nashville-Atlanta. Take it, so if you get a ticket down to Miami, you can get there easier. 20 free points by taking this one route you won't need, when LA-Miami comes up for you.
One of my key comments though: Don't waste time with tickets that aren't worth finishing. Too often people will hold on to say, Kansas City-Houston (5) and spend 10 or so trains finishing it. For a 5 point increase, it just isn't worth it. Take the 5 point hit, and pick up new tickets. Chances are, you'll be able to finish one worth far more.
If not, it's a game of chance and strategy anyway, such is life, if you lose too many points, concede defeat, move on to the next game.
You will not, I repeat, will not, win every game, and you're a fool if you think you will.
It's an amazing game, a perfect blend of chance and planning.