Survive Escape From Atlantis 30th Anniversary Edition Singolo

Brand:Zygomatic

3.9/5

86.26

NUMERO DI GIOCATORI E TEMPO DI GIOCO MEDIO: questo emozionante gioco di avventura è pensato per 2-4 giocatori ed è adatto a partire dagli 8 anni. Il tempo medio di riproduzione è di circa 45 minuti. DIVERTIMENTO PER TUTTA LA FAMIGLIA: le regole del gioco sono facili da imparare, il che lo rende un'ottima scelta per adulti e bambini . Piastrelle modulari e configurazione variabile significano che ogni gioco è un'esperienza unica e coinvolgente. IMPEGNATIVO E COMPETITIVO: ogni giocatore controlla dieci persone che cercano di spostarsi verso la sicurezza delle isole circostanti prima che l'isola principale esploda definitivamente. I giocatori possono nuotare o usare le barche per viaggiare, ma devono evitare serpenti marini, balene e squali nel loro cammino verso la salvezza. GIOCO DA TAVOLO STRATEGICO: In questo spietato gioco di sopravvivenza, i giocatori cercano di evacuare i propri pezzi da un'isola che si sta sgretolando mentre ricordano dove si trovano i loro pezzi di maggior valore per massimizzare il loro punteggio. EMOZIONANTE GIOCO DI AVVENTURA: è l'inizio del XX secolo La misteriosa isola di Atlantide è stata scoperta nel mezzo dell'oceano e si vocifera di ricchezza! Dopo aver raggiunto Atlantide, gli esploratori sono pronti per tornare a casa con tesori e manufatti. Ma Atlantide inizia ad affondare! Chi riuscirà a raggiungere la terraferma?.

EAN: 885227770765

Categories: Videogiochi, computer, Giochi,

NUMERO DI GIOCATORI E TEMPO DI GIOCO MEDIO: questo emozionante gioco di avventura è pensato per 2-4 giocatori ed è adatto a partire dagli 8 anni. Il tempo medio di riproduzione è di circa 45 minuti. DIVERTIMENTO PER TUTTA LA FAMIGLIA: le regole del gioco sono facili da imparare, il che lo rende un'ottima scelta per adulti e bambini . Piastrelle modulari e configurazione variabile significano che ogni gioco è un'esperienza unica e coinvolgente. IMPEGNATIVO E COMPETITIVO: ogni giocatore controlla dieci persone che cercano di spostarsi verso la sicurezza delle isole circostanti prima che l'isola principale esploda definitivamente. I giocatori possono nuotare o usare le barche per viaggiare, ma devono evitare serpenti marini, balene e squali nel loro cammino verso la salvezza. GIOCO DA TAVOLO STRATEGICO: In questo spietato gioco di sopravvivenza, i giocatori cercano di evacuare i propri pezzi da un'isola che si sta sgretolando mentre ricordano dove si trovano i loro pezzi di maggior valore per massimizzare il loro punteggio. EMOZIONANTE GIOCO DI AVVENTURA: è l'inizio del XX secolo La misteriosa isola di Atlantide è stata scoperta nel mezzo dell'oceano e si vocifera di ricchezza! Dopo aver raggiunto Atlantide, gli esploratori sono pronti per tornare a casa con tesori e manufatti. Ma Atlantide inizia ad affondare! Chi riuscirà a raggiungere la terraferma?.
Customer Reviews 4.9 4.9 out of 5 stars 1,289 ratings 4.9 out of 5 stars
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer No
Item model number STG02002
Item Weight 2.95 pounds
Manufacturer Publisher Services Inc
Manufacturer recommended age 8 years and up
Product Dimensions 12.84 x 2.36 x 11.81 inches
Release date April 29, 2022

3.9

8 Review
5 Star
90
4 Star
7
3 Star
1
2 Star
0
1 Star
1

Scrivi la tua recensione

La tua mail non sarà pubblicata. Tutti i campi obbligatori sono segnati con*

Scritto da: Travis Lopez
Purple Phoenix Games Review
I have never been on a sinking anything. Sure, I have flipped over kayaks, and paddle-boards, and anything else that requires me to balance on top of water. But I cannot imagine the terror of being on an island that just… sinks into the deep. Oh also running out of room and having to swim to safe land. Oh also while sharks, whales, and sea monsters are chasing me. You know what? Maybe I’m cool with being located in the Midwest. I’ll just play this game and live vicariously through the esceeples (escaping meeples? I need a handbook for these -eeple terms). Survive: Escape from Atlantis! (which I now will call Survive) is an competitive adventure game featuring action points, grid movement, secret unit deployment, dice rolls, and lots of take-that. And little boats. It also can destroy friendships and ruin evenings. Play at your own risk. DISCLAIMER: There are several expansions to this game, but we are not reviewing them at this time. We ARE including the 5-6 player mini expansion, however. Should we review the others in the future we will either update this review or post a link to the new material here. Also, I do not intend to detail every rule in the book, but give our readers an idea of how the game plays and our thoughts on it. -T To setup a game of Survive, each player will choose a color and take into their supply all the meeples of that color and two boats. Place all the terrain tiles randomly (and face down) within the bolded line on the board to create the central island. Place out the sea serpents on the sea serpent spots as menacingly as possible. Players then take turns placing their numbered meeples on terrain tiles until all meeples have been placed, and their boateeples on any water space near the island they wish. Keep aside the shark, whale, and dolphin meeples for later. Give the die to the first player and you are ready to play. On a player’s turn they will 1. Play any tiles from their hand, 2. Move meeples, 3. Remove terrain a tile, 4. Roll the die and move creatures. At the beginning of the game nobody will have any tiles in hand to play, so skip this step if there are no tiles in hand. On subsequent turns players may have collected tiles as a result of the #3 action, and now is the time to play those. Typically they are beneficial for the active player or detrimental to the opponents. Next, the active player will move their meeples in any combination three total board hexes. This can be done with one or more meeples on land or in the water. There are movement restrictions that I will not cover here. After movement, the active player will remove one of the terrain tiles with the lowest elevation (sand, forest, then mountain tiles). The player flips over the tile and will play it immediately if it shows an arrow, or keeps it in hand if it shows a hand icon. Finally, the active player will roll the red die and move creatures per the movement table printed on the board. Creature movement creates the tension in the game (as if fighting over the boats wasn’t enough). You see, when sharks enter the board and are moved, they are hungry for swimmer meeples (obv). Whales are hungry(?) for boats and will destroy them but fling the meeples aboard into the water to become swimmers. Sea serpents don’t care. They will eat swimmers and manned boats… but they’re the slowest movers. So consider that. Play continues in this fashion until the either all meeples have been removed from the play grid, or a player flips over the volcano mountain tile and ends the game. Any meeples who have made it to the safety of the outer islands are worth the VP printed on their bottoms. Wait, not the butts. The bottom of the meeples. Which I guess are the feet. Components. To reiterate, in case it was missed, we are reviewing the 2010 Stronghold edition. There is a newer version, and it seems to look a little better but plays the same. However, I love the components of this version too. The meeples are fine, the creatures are cool, the varying thicknesses of the terrain tiles makes for an interesting mini-3D look, and the board is great without being too busy and distracting. I have absolutely no issues with these components and think they are super. Now, you may have read in my intro that this game may ruin friendships and the evening, and I really am not joking about this. I have played this so many times where at least one person becomes completely angered by the chomping of the shark or the horrible movement of the sea serpent adjacent to their boat. It’s just a game, and it’s inevitable in this one – your meeples will get eaten. It’s gonna happen! When I teach this now I try to make that apparent right away because it is then not viewed as absolutely treachery when it happens to newer players. Should you be playing with sensitive gamers, please instruct them early that it WILL happen or you’re gonna have a bad time. However, this game is great! I love it now as much as I ever have. It’s an older horse for me, but one of which I will never tire. I can and love to play it with new gamers, especially the ones that are hoping to join the inner circle. If you can hang through a game of Survive without being angered and taking it all in stride, you are welcome at my table ANY time. That said, as you can see by our ratings, Purple Phoenix Games gives this one a mighty and well-deserved 21 / 24. If you enjoy games that upset your players and want a cool theme on it, check out Survive: Escape from Atlantis!
Scritto da: Sara Gulyas
Super fun!
Everyone in my family loves this game. From age 5 to age 60. It's not hard to learn and can be pretty competitive but fun.
Scritto da: Michael
Great casual game with a good variety of gameplay
This is our current favorite game! I like games where you feel that your strategy effects the outcome of the game. It's also good for a game to have some luck so that people of different levels can play and the outcome won't only be decided by strategy. I also like that a lot of the "luck" is actually other player choices. There is very little cooperative gameplay and there's no trading/collecting. It's all about getting the most of your men safe from a sinking Atlantis! The game in a nutshell is one where you save your people, and depending on which people you save will give you a total score that you try to beat everyone else's total score. You can play with two people, but it's really a 3-4 player game (5-6 expansion available but I've not tried it). The goal is to escape a sinking island across the sea to the other islands at the 4 corners of the board. Every turn you get three movements to try and get some of your 10 people to safety. Also every turn you remove one of 40 land tiles. First you remove the sand, then the forest, and then the rock tiles. One of the 8 rock tiles has the volcano which ends the game. Once the game ends, everyone on Atlantis or in the ocean dies and you count up your tiles. Oh, and beware, there are whales, sea creatures and sharks in the water! Pros: -There's variety in the gameplay. Every turn you have up to five things to do and there is a different starting gameplay. You may be able to use a tile from previous gameplay, you get to move your people, you get to take a land tile from the board, you may be able to use that tile immediately, and finally you get to roll a die which lets you move a monster. For as simple a game as it is, there is some real variety in what you're doing! And there's not a single mechanic I dislike. -You can surprise yourself! Each of your people has a different point value from 1-6 on their feet. You only look at the feet at the beginning of the game. If you don't keep track of where what point value is, you may have to wait to the end of the game to see what your score is! Nobody other than you knows the point values at all, so they have no idea how many points they need to beat you! Don't tell my wife, but I turn the biggest point value sideways... -The end of the game has some randomness. Everybody knows the volcano end game tile is somewhere in the rocky ground. But it could be the first rock turned or it could be the last! That add some tension when you get to the rock tiles, and knowing there is an end coming keeps you from playing too defensive of a game. Cons: -It's possible to know you will lose halfway into the game and have to keep playing. You could lose your highest scoring people or even lose all of your people. Then you are supposed to keep playing till the end. -There are a lot of mechanics that encourage revenge play. The players could all gang up against someone too. You can certainly play fair, but there's no mechanic to discourage these tactics. -There are green tiles you can play immediately and red tiles you play your next turn. If you look carefully at the edge of the face down land tiles you can tell whether you're grabbing a green or red tile. I wish the very edge of the bottom of every tile was black so you couldn't tell them apart. We love this game! The adults have played it regularly and the 8 year old son picked up immediately. I'm not sure if the six year old daughter gets it, but I didn't really expect her to. If you like Catan or other casual games, I really suggest this! After you learn how to play it only takes 30-45 minutes. In fact I've not had the game end yet where people didn't want to play a second time!
Scritto da: G. Pease
Good game listed as new but doesn’t seem to be.
This is a fun game. It is complete but I don’t think it is new as stated when I purchased it. So it would not be giftable. There was no cellophane wrap around the game. Inside pieces were everywhere with missing baggies. No promotional ad material included. Damage on a couple of box corners. I don’t think I would pay as much as I did for a used/damaged box game if informed.
Scritto da: Tina
Fun, easy to learn game for families
Pros: took about an hour to play Pieces are good quality wood Interesting concept that we don't already have a game very similar (we have a lot of games) Very cool ending to the game (it ends when someone randomly picks the volcano tile) Can play a more aggressive game or a more cooperative game Cons: my kids got mad when they lost explorers which can be pretty frequent near the end (just an FYI if this is a problem in your house too)
Scritto da: David
Great game!
I’ve been playing this game since it originally came out but never had a copy of my own. I was very excited when I saw this anniversary copy come out. Much to my surprise, it is made better than the original too, which is great! Can’t wait to play it!
Scritto da: Newtburghardt91
fun game for all
love this game
Scritto da: mm
Fun Game
This game is a fun family game. Takes around 30 mins to play. Easy to understand instructions. My teenage kids enjoy it as well.

Prodotti correlati

Scopri il nostro network internazionale

Spediamo in 28 paesi, oltre 200.000 prodotti. Resta aggiornato, iscriviti alla newsletter.

Shopping Cart