Decipher all together, from 2 to 4 players, the hidden word of a player in about 20 minutes!
Decipher is a deduction game where you create and decipher secret words.
Players have at their disposal four types of segments that they will have to combine in order to form letters which will in turn constitute a word.
The Coder creates a word that the Decryptors try to guess a bit like the Hanged Man.
At each turn, the coder gives a letter segment to the active decryptor who must find which letter he is participating in.
If it gives the correct location, the decryptors advance in their deductions, if the location is wrong, it also gives information as to the letter to be found, but it also awards a point to the coder.
The first Decryptor to find the word wins five points, so you have to hurry to deduce the word before the others, but any incorrect guess will make you give the coder 1 point.
During the game, you become Coder for one turn and Decryptor for the other turns.
The game ends when each player has been a Coder once.
Measure yourself against your opponent and try either to get out of the tower or to prevent your opponent from fleeing in 10 to 20 minutes as a duo!
Shy Monsters (Mutlose Monster) is an asymmetrical bluffing game for two players in which one player builds a dungeon and his opponent tries to escape from it.
The Dungeon Master leads a band of timid monsters.
Make sure to respect their favorite places in the dungeon, otherwise they won't attack the hero.
The Hero must decipher the structure of the dungeon well and use his special actions wisely to get out of it alive.
With Quadropolis; to your constructions to create the most optimized city in 30 to 60 minutes for 2 to 4 players, then to your constructions!
Each player builds their own metropolis in Quadropolis, but they compete with each other for shops, parks, utilities, and other structures to place there.
The game lasts four rounds, and in each round players first arrange the tiles for the appropriate round randomly on a 5x5 grid.
Each player has four architects numbered from 1 to 4 and during a turn, a player places an architect next to a row or column in the grid, claims the tile that is as far as the number of the placed architect (e.g. the fourth tile in for architect #4), places that tile in the appropriately numbered row or column on the player's 4x4 city board, then claims all resources associated with the tile (inhabitants or energy).
After four rounds, the game ends. Players can move dwellers and energy between their tiles at any point in the game to see how to maximize their score.
At the end of the game, they then score for each of the six building types based on how well their city was built – as long as they have activated the buildings with dwellers or energy as needed.
With Joraku we will literally “Go to Kyoto” in 45 minutes for 3 to 4 Daimyo, so get your swords!
Joraku, an ancient Japanese word commonly used before the Edo period, which means "to go to Kyoto".
Specifically, during the Sengoku period, Joraku refers to the act of local warlords - the Daimyo marching their armies towards Kyoto, to "protect the Shogun and the Emperor from other rogue lords" and ultimately rule in their stead. .
Onward to Kyoto!
Take command of your army and defeat all the Daimyos that block the way!
March on! To victory! March on! Kachidoki!
Joraku is a zone control game that takes turns.
Outsmart your opponents with tactical card play, use your loyal samurai to take control of areas and boost your prestige.
Only the Daimyo with the highest reputation and the biggest stick can rule Japan!
Each troop is organized into one or more units.
Each game turn is divided into two player sub-turns.
Each player can perform a movement phase, a non-active lateral reaction movement phase, a forced march phase and a combat phase.
All units can move in the movement phase, but must pass the activity test in the reaction and forced march phase.
Combat result by CRT firepower and two dice.
The winner is determined by victory points.
Victory points are provided by capturing a castle, destroying enemy units, and controlling Kyoto, the former capital of Japan.
Today we are going to talk about Hanafuda Koi Koi!
Develop your floral strategies in 40 minutes as a duo, based on seasonal flowers and combos.
A traditional Japanese two-player card game played with the beautiful Hanafuda (literally "flower card") deck. Setup: the cards are all shuffled, and a card is randomly revealed: the player whose birthday month is closest to the month of the revealed card is the first player and therefore the dealer.
The cards are again shuffled and dealt, two by two, to the two players, as for the greenhouse visible in the middle of the table. Turn: Next, each player proceeds as follows: first, they discard a card face up on the table from their hand. If this card corresponds to another card on the table (corresponding months), the player then wins the two cards that he places in his collection face up, in front of him. The collection is always displayed in 4 columns, as follows: Flowers, Ribbons, Animals and Specials.
If it does not match anything, the discarded card remains on the table. Second, whether it matches or not, the player then draws the top card from the deck face down and proceeds in the same way: if it does not match any card, the drawn card remains on the table, but if it matches a card , the player wins the two cards that he adds to his collection. Then the other player takes his turn.
End of turn: At the end of a player's turn, if he has Yakus, he can stop the current month (round) by indicating his Yakus, then the points are scored and the next month begins. However, if he wishes to continue in order to increase his score for that month, he says "Koi-Koi" and the other player takes his turn. If later in the game, the player who said Koi-Koi wins another Yaku OR increases his previous Yakus, then he can stop the game again or say Koi-Koi, as many times as he wants. But if a player gets a Yaku in a game where his opponent has already said Koi-Koi, then he has the right either to say Koi-Koi too or to stop the game and receive his points, thus causing his opponent to get no points at all this month.
End: Since each player has 8 cards in hand, a month (round) can at worst last 16 turns. In the case of a game where one (or both) player(s) said Koi-Koi and no other Yakus were added or increased before the end of the month, then only the last player who said Koi- Koi scores his points as usual. The winner of one month becomes the croupier of the following month, or remains the same if there was no winner.
But if a player gets a Yaku in a game where his opponent has already said Koi-Koi, then he has the right either to say Koi-Koi too or to stop the game and receive his points, thus causing his opponent to get no points. at all this month. Each Yaku can be added to the others.
Here are the Yakus:
Basic Yakus 10 Flowers / Kasu: 1 point (Each additional Flower earns 1 point) 5 Ribbons / Tanzaku: 1 point (Each additional Ribbon earns 1 point) 3 Purple (blue) Ribbons / Aotan: 5 points 3 Ribbons with Poems (red) / Akatan: 5 points 5 Animals / Tane: 1 Point (Each additional Animal earns 1 point) Deer + Boar + Butterflies / Ino Shika Chô: 5 Points 3 Specials without Rain Man / Sankô: 5 Points 4 Specials with the Rain Man / Ameshikô: 6 points 4 Special without the Rain Man / Shikô: 8 Points 5 Specials: Gokô: 10 points Special Yakus The Moon + The Sake Cup / Tsukizake: 5 points (Bonus Yaku, only in addition to at least another normal Yaku) The Cherry Curtain + The Saké / Hanamizake Cup: 5 points (Bonus Yaku, only in addition to at least one other normal Yaku) The Iris Flower is a "Joker" card: it can either be counted as an Animal or as a Flower to form a Kasu (but not both). The 4 Cards of the Current Month / TsukiFuda: 5 points No Yakus / OyaKen: 1 point The game ends when a player reaches 50 points.
In some variants, at the end of a month, the points scored by a player are subtracted from his opponent's score.
In some variants, the player with the most points at the end of the year (December) wins the game.
Become an apprentice ninja in 15 to 30 minutes, from 2 to 4 players, being the smartest and strategist of all.
Hello, campers!
I hope you slept well last night, because Sensei Saru has a full day of training in store for you!
So study your lessons well and be faster and smarter than your fellow campers, because Sensei invites only the best to be his personal apprentices. Will it be YOU? !
Ninja Camp pits animal martial artists against each other in a training exercise where the best will become Sensei Saru's personal ninja apprentice.
Each player starts with two cards, each representing a ninja skill, with the rest of the deck making up the game board.
Using the cards in their hand, players navigate the board, adding new skills to their hand as they go and leaving fewer movement options for their campmates.
Each player also has a unique ninja ability that they can use once per game to try and turn the game in their favor.
A game that sets up and plays in thirty minutes or less, Ninja Camp is sure to provide hours of fun for families and aspiring ninjas!
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