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LonPos 101 Pyramid and Rectangle Game (4;6;9)
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mental_floss: The Trivia Game (6;6;5)
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Urban Legends the Game (1;2;1)
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Wordigy: A World of Words for Family Fun (3;1;1)
Wreck the Nation: the Game of Political Misbehavior (1;2;1)
You Must Be an Idiot! (9;9;9)
Zeus on the Loose (8;8;7)
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- Replay Value (1-10): 5
- Fun Factor (1-10): 3
- Worth Buying (1-10): 2
In this game, each player gets a set of three solid tokens and
twelve "ring" tokens. On the 5x5 board, each space can either be filled with
one solid token, or up to four rings of different size. The game
starts with a "wild token" in the center that belongs to all colors; on
a player's turn, they may place one token or ring as long as there is
room for it and the space is adjacent to a space on which they have
a ring or token. Also, solid tokens of the same color cannot ever be
adjacent. After no player has any legal moves left, the winner is the
player who has control of the most spaces (control being defined as an
absolute plurality of the tokens on that space).
The manufacturer claims this game is fast-paced and addictive. For me,
at least, that was wrong on both counts. Since abstracts like these
are rarely an interesting challenge with more than 2 players, I started
a two player game. It was instantly obvious that there was a symmetry
strategy -- anything the first player did, the second player could
just copy on the other side, which basically means a tie is guaranteed
by the second player. The game just doesn't seem to be designed by anyone
who spent any time researching or understanding abstract games -- a shame,
because the concept has potential.
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