Round TwoImic vs KittyTacImic: Rock
KittyTac: Paper
Winner!0cra_tr0per vs TheRedWolf0cra_tr0per: Paper
Winner!TheRedWolf: Rock
King Zultan vs Failbird105King Zultan: Scissors
Failbird105: Rock
Winner!TricMagic vs The_Two_Eternities
TricMagic: Rock
Winner!The_Two_Eternities: Scissors
2 KittyTac
1 0cra_tr0per
1 Failbird105
1 The_Two_Eternities
1 TricMagic
0 Imic
0 King Zultan
0 TheRedWolf
0cra_tr0per: 2 Paper points
Failbird105: 2 Rock points
Imic: 2 Rock points
King Zultan: 1 Rock point & 1 Scissors point
KittyTac: 1 Paper point & 1 Scissors point
The_Two_Eternities: 2 Scissors points Researched Big Scissors!
TheRedWolf: 1 Rock point & 1 Paper point
TricMagic: 2 Rock points Researched Big Rock!
Round Three (Prebattle)The_Two_Eternities vs
0cra_tr0perRock
Paper
Scissors
Big Scissors
TricMagic vs
ImicRock
Paper
Scissors
Big Rock
KittyTac vs
King ZultanTheRedWolf vs
Failbird105Rock
Type: Basic
Aspects: Rock / none / none
Produces: Rock point
Paper
Type: Basic
Aspects: Paper / none / none
Produces: Paper point
Scissors
Type: Basic
Aspects: Scissors / none / none
Produces: Scissors point
Big Rock
Type: Advanced
Aspects: Rock / Rock / none
Produces: Rock point
If this move beats a move with the same ability, you gain 2 points instead of 1.
Big Scissors
Type: Advanced
Aspects: Scissors / Scissors / none
Produces: Scissors point
If this move beats a move with the same ability, you gain 2 points instead of 1.
Big Paper
Type: Advanced
Aspects: Paper / Paper / none
Produces: Paper point
If this move beats a move with the same ability, you gain 2 points instead of 1.
Engraved Rock
Type: Advanced
Aspects: Rock / Paper / Paper
Produces: Rock point
Stone Scissors
Type: Advanced
Aspects: Scissors / Rock / Rock
Produces: Scissors point
Here is the complete way to tell which of two Moves will win if one or both of them have multiple types of Aspects. Obviously, looking at The Board is easier, but here's the reasoning behind it. Starting with the top of the the following list, the first Move to beat the other wins:
1. Compare the most numerous Aspect of one Move against the most numerous Aspect of the other
2. Compare the most numerous Aspect of each Move against the least numerous Aspect of the other
3. Compare the least numerous Aspect of one Move against the least numerous Aspect of the other
4. Compare the number of Aspects in one Move against the number of Aspects in the other
If the list is exhausted with neither Move prevailing, there is a tie.