King of Tokyo
Designer(s) | Richard Garfield[1] |
---|---|
Publisher(s) | IELLO[1] |
Players | 2 to 6[1] |
Playing time | 30 minutes[1] |
King of Tokyo is a tabletop game using custom dice, cards, and boards, designed by Richard Garfield and released in 2011.[1] A New York City-based edition, King of New York, was published in 2014.[2] A new version of the game was released in 2016, with all new artwork and characters, as well as mutant monsters, gigantic robots and other creatures.
Gameplay
Players choose one of six monsters (Alienoid, Cyber Bunny, Giga Zaur, Kraken, Meka Dragon, and The King; in the second edition Cyber Bunny and Kraken are replaced by Cyber Kitty and Space Penguin) which comes with a scoring board. The winner is the first player to reach 20 points, or the only player to have any health.[3][4]
Players throw 6 dice, and may reroll some of them[3] as in the dice game Yahtzee.
Die faces are power, health, attack, 1, 2, and 3. With power dice, players collect power tokens to buy power cards with. With health dice, players outside Tokyo heal damage done to them. With attack dice, players outside Tokyo attack players in Tokyo, or players in Tokyo attack players outside. Three 1 dice score 1 point, three 2s score 2, and three 3s score 3. Any additional same-numbered die scores 1 additional point.[3]
Expansions
- 2012's Power Up! introduced 56 evolution cards, 7 tokens, and a new monster: Pandakaï.[5]
Variants
- 2014's King of New York introduces six new monsters (Captain Fish, Sheriff, Kong, Mantis, Rob, and Drakonis) attacking the boroughs of New York City. The new game features to this stand alone game include buildings to destroy and human military forces that can fight back.
- 2016's King of New York: Power Up is a similar expansion to the Power Up for King of Tokyo and provides evolution cards for the six monsters in the King of New York base game and adds a new monster: Mega Shark.
Awards
- Golden geek
- Best Children's Game (2012)
- Best Family Board Game (2012)
- Best Party Game (2012)
- Ludoteca Ideale (2012)
- Nederlandse Spellenprijs: Best Family Game (2013)[1]
Honors
- Golden geek
- Japan Boardgame Prize Voters' Selection Nominee (2011)[8]
- Lucca Games Best Family Game Nominee (2011)[8]
- Lys Grand Public Finalist (2011)[8]
- As d'Or - Jeu de l'Année Nominee (2012)[8]
- Gouden Ludo Nominee (2012)[8]
- Boardgames Australia Awards Best International Game Nominee (2013)[8]
- Juego del Año Tico Nominee (2013)[8]
- Nederlandse Spellenprijs Best Family Game Nominee (2013)[8]
See also
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 "King of Tokyo". BoardGameGeek. Retrieved 2013-10-31.
- ↑ "King of New York". Board Game Geek. Retrieved 2014-01-03
- 1 2 3 "King of Tokyo rules" (PDF). Iello. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-11-02. Retrieved 2013-10-31.
- ↑ Wells, John. "King of Tokyo- Review". Splitkick.com. Retrieved 31 December 2013.
- ↑ "King of Tokyo: Power Up!". BoardGameGeek. Retrieved 2013-10-31.
- ↑ "King of Tokyo: Halloween". BoardGameGeek. Retrieved 2013-10-31.
- ↑ "King of Tokyo: Holloween". Retrieved 31 December 2013.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 "King of Tokyo". Retrieved 31 December 2013.