Talk:Checkpoint
I don't know, I've been a border guard twice now, and have found that there's still a good amount of enjoyable strategy in it for them. If there are a lot of entrances to the end zone, you need to strike the right balance between strict patrols and spur-of-the-moment deviations, which makes for an interesting lesson. And if it's a busy public space, there's a lot of fun in identifying the smugglers and second-guessing their motives - my proudest border guard moments have been when I've picked someone out of a crowd purely from their sudden 180° turn, or nervous second glance.
If I was going to make it more fun for the guards, I think I'd just up the theatrics - the UV lamps and Polaroid mugshots at Hide and Seek were great, and it'd add to both coordination and drama if you could get hold of a few walkie-talkies for the guards.
Mm, when we've run Checkpoint we've usually treated the guards as part of the game world, using volunteers rather than players, and that's seemed to work best - when you do get random players to be guards, a few of them always really take to it, but most of them just don't find it as much fun, whereas if you've got volunteers who see their role as making the game function, both guards and smugglers will probably enjoy it more. If you can't use volunteers, letting people choose a side helps - so that you do get border guards who are going to enjoy the theatrics of guarding.
It would complicate the game a lot and make it into something quite different, but it might be interesting to have smugglers able to triumph individually as well as as a team - the smuggler who gets the most items through is the winner. That creates some leverage for the guards to use - they can try to sow dissidence among the smuggler's ranks, or bribe a smuggler with "I'll let you get through if you tell me what route the rest of them are using". And if you're rewarding individuals, then rewarding the guard who manages to confiscate the goods also makes sense, and adds more of an element of competition.
An open challenge to others: how do you make being a Border Guard into a fun role? Right now they're like glorified babysitters.
In my variant of Checkpoint, I'm toying with various ideas - let the Guards search for the stash at point A so the smugglers must hide it well or move it; let Guards employ one "rat" on the smuggler team; let Guards employ a small "plain clothes" black ops squad, etc. What do you guys think?