This was playing with the 10 rainbow card variant where all rainbow cards are clued as every color (i.e., they are played as a separate color, but not clued as a separate color).
Hanabi is one of the greatest games made in recent years. It's a cooperative game where players can see everyone else's cards, but not their own. You must give clues about the cards in other people's hands, play a card from your hand, or discard a card from your hand. There are limits on what types of clues you can give and how many you can give. The goal is the put down all the cards of each color, in ascending numeric order.
The game is an exercise in logic and deduction, but most initial reactions of new players is that they focus on the memorization aspect. Those people have only scratched the surface. When played well, there's not much information to memorize, as most things you learn will be actionable. The fun is trusting your partners to give good clues and deducing what's in your hand based on the clues they give. When going well, it's a very satisfying mind-meld experience. When going poorly, it's even more fun to see just how long ago the game went off the rails and no one knew.
@JerseyFrank too busy eating cells to read.
@marklog ???
@JerseyFrank https://meh.com/forum/topics/game-time-agar-io--its-a-cell-eat-cell-world
@JerseyFrank I can't read it. Is it just all players signing names?
@jqubed Yep, we all signed the card.
Bullshit
@JazzyJosh Didn't even lose a fuse token.
I don't know what that means but it seems impressive since you signed the cards and everything, so...great job! Congrats!
https://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/98778/hanabi
This was playing with the 10 rainbow card variant where all rainbow cards are clued as every color (i.e., they are played as a separate color, but not clued as a separate color).
Hanabi is one of the greatest games made in recent years. It's a cooperative game where players can see everyone else's cards, but not their own. You must give clues about the cards in other people's hands, play a card from your hand, or discard a card from your hand. There are limits on what types of clues you can give and how many you can give. The goal is the put down all the cards of each color, in ascending numeric order.
The game is an exercise in logic and deduction, but most initial reactions of new players is that they focus on the memorization aspect. Those people have only scratched the surface. When played well, there's not much information to memorize, as most things you learn will be actionable. The fun is trusting your partners to give good clues and deducing what's in your hand based on the clues they give. When going well, it's a very satisfying mind-meld experience. When going poorly, it's even more fun to see just how long ago the game went off the rails and no one knew.