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This is Robert Stewart with Hill13.com. Now you've moved your players across the field
in the opening part of the game. You've all arrived at your bunkers and you've all got
your shooting lines, or your fields of fire, and you understand where your, where your
protecting the team and what your function is based upon a decision you made before the
game began. So when we look at the board again, and we realize that in almost all tournament
play each team will take up about a third of the field and try to hold that line. This
is where the bloodletting really begins. Once both teams are in position this is when players
begin to become eliminated and this is usually due to the strength of play on one side or
the other. So in this case the blue team, if they are the more powerful team, this is
where they begin to eliminate players from the red team and seek control. In the process,
one of the things you have to remember is don't advance beyond your line until you've
had the chance to eliminate a few of the players from the opposing force. If you start, if
you are being very effective as a team, and when they try to jump the gun, so to speak
and move to end game and move into this area, if you can start eliminating players, you
try to determine which side you're really working the most effectively. The more players
that you're able to pick off as they're on the move, the longer you can hold here and
let them throw themselves at you and get eliminated, the sooner you'll come to the point, the tipping
point when we leave the mid game and move to end game. End game comes at a point when
you have eliminated a sizable number of the other teams players. Mid game has ended, now
the quick and sudden termination of this game is about to begin.