Tales of the Arabian Nights

Veröffentlicht 1985

This entry is for the West End Games version and other printings. For the 2009 Z-Man Games version, go to Tales of the Arabian Nights Tales of the Arabian Nights is actually several games in one. In the standard game, the players are characters living in the 1001 Nights universe, wandering about the map and having adventures. These adventures are designed in a sort of paragraph system, with the player to your left reading what happens to you and exposing the choices you have - choices that then lead to other paragraphs or outcomes. The characters evolve during their adventures, acquiring skills of various degrees of advancement to open up new options and various "statuses" (such as married, despondent, cursed, etc) which also affect play. The object is to become rich and come back to Baghdad. Other variants of the standard game include the Quest game, which forces you to roam the map looking for quests to fulfill. There's also a Merchant game, where your adventures give you arrow tokens which are used on a little separate board to simulate the progress of your caravans. The German edition, Geschichten aus 1001 Nacht, was published in 2000 and contained a revised Book of Tales along with some extra adventures. Re-implemented by: Tales of the Arabian Nights

Tales of the Arabian Nights

Spielinformationen

Spieler
1-6 Players
Zeit
2 hours
Gewicht
Light-Medium — 2,42/5
Jahr
1985
BGG-Bewertung
7,04
BGG-Rang
#3852
Mindestalter
12+

Häufig gestellte Fragen

Tales of the Arabian Nights supports 1 to 6 players.
A typical game of Tales of the Arabian Nights takes about 120 minutes.
Tales of the Arabian Nights has a complexity rating of 2.42/5.00 on BoardGameGeek, placing it in the 'Medium Light' category. It offers a good balance of depth and accessibility.
The recommended minimum age for Tales of the Arabian Nights is 12+.
Tales of the Arabian Nights has a rating of 7.04/10 on BoardGameGeek, based on 836 ratings. It is ranked #3852 overall.
Tales of the Arabian Nights was designed by Eric Goldberg, Kevin Maroney, Brad Freeman, Doug Kaufman, Ken Rolston. It was published in 1985.