Combinatorial Game Theory is a branch of mathematics and theoretical computer
science that studies sequential 2-player games with perfect information. Normal
play is the convention where a player who cannot move loses. Here, we
generalize the classical alternating normal play to infinitely many game
families, by means of discrete Richman auctions (Develin et al. 2010, Larsson
et al. 2021, Lazarus et al. 1996). We generalize the notion of a perfect play
outcome, and find an exact characterization of outcome feasibility. As a main
result, we prove existence of a game form for each such outcome class; then we
describe their lattice structures. By imposing restrictions to the general
families, such as impartial and {\em symmetric termination}, we find surprising
analogies with alternating play.Comment: 5 figure