Taiga

نُشرت 2010

To set up Findevier, lay out the ten double-sided animal discs in a circle. Shuffle the deck of cards, place them in the circle, then reveal the top card, thereby showing the animal that players will search for in the first round. Place 1-4 tokens in the circle to account for the animals of this type that aren't visible. (Two cards show woodland elves instead of an animal, and the plaeyr who draws this card chooses which animal players will search for.) On a turn, a player flips over one of the discs to reveal the animal shown on the other side. If the player reveals the target animal, she earns one token from the circle; if the player reveals the fourth animal of this type, the player takes the final token, along with the animal card. Once all four animals of the desired type are visible, reveal the next card. Once all twelve cards have been used, the game ends and the player with the most points wins. Each token and animal card is worth one point, while the two elf cards are worth two points each. Game play in Taiga is nearly identical to that of Findevier, with the differences being (1) that the game has only ten animal cards and no elf cards; (2) that a player who reveals an incorrect animal must return a token to the bank; and (3) that each token is worth one point and each animal card is worth two points.

آليات اللعب

المصممون

Taiga

معلومات اللعبة

اللاعبون
2-6 Players
الوقت
15 min
الثقل
Light — 1,1/5
السنة
2010
تقييم BGG
6,35
ترتيب BGG
#13472
الحد الأدنى للعمر
5+

الأسئلة الشائعة

Taiga supports 2 to 6 players.
A typical game of Taiga takes about 15 minutes.
Taiga has a complexity rating of 1.10/5.00 on BoardGameGeek, placing it in the 'Light' category. It is very accessible and great for new gamers.
The recommended minimum age for Taiga is 5+. Younger children may enjoy it with guidance from experienced players.
Taiga has a rating of 6.35/10 on BoardGameGeek, based on 133 ratings. It is ranked #13472 overall.
Taiga was designed by Jacques Zeimet. It was published in 2010.