![]() I feel the solo / co op mode is well designed and robust. The solo deck of cards is easy to understand and control the Ai characters, where to move them and what actions to carry out. There are many small details to easily overlook when learning the game. The game is smooth to play, the player aid cards are a huge help in playing! If it wasn't for the player aid cards, I would have probably sold this game. Once that is completed you check if you managed to stop the machine from bringing out another guard and advancing the clock. Once that is done, you move your characters to their desired location and carry out an action. City Event card (what you need to do to prevent a guard from coming out and to stop the Machine from advancing), Next get trust (money) for each character then place a location card to where you want to go (or stay), after that the machine takes it turn. Learning the game might seem overwhelming but it is broken down into 5 simple steps. Im glad I picked this up! Before getting into the game itself, the game has lots of storage space and the components are of good quality. SOLO REVIEW: First off, City of the Great Machine is my first Hidden Movement game. (These versions also allow players to play the game Hattrick by the same designer, with rules for this game included as a variant.) Some versions of Sticheln allow for play with up to six players, while the third and fourth German editions of the game include enough cards to allow for play with up to eight players. ![]() Play as many hands as the number of players in the game, summing each player's points over those hands to determine a winner. In the event of a tie, the earlier played card breaks the tie. (One exception: A zero card can never win a trick.) In effect, each color played in a particular trick that doesn't match the color of the card led is considered a trump card, and the highest trump wins. If all cards are of the same color, then whoever played the highest card collects these cards, then leads the next trick if all cards are not of the same color, then whoever played the highest card of a color not initially led collects these cards, then leads the next trick. To play out the hand, the active player leads a card, then each other player in clockwise order plays one card. Can I run Stick Em Up To play the game, make sure that your PC has the minimum system requirements (Intel Pentium 4 1500MHz or AMD A10 PRO-7800B APU CPU, NVIDIA GeForce 6100 or AMD RADEON A9800XT GPU, 4 GB RAM). ![]() ![]() Each card of another color that this player has collected is worth 1 point. At the end of the hand, each card of this color that they've collected (including their initial choice from their hand) is worth negative points equal to the card's face value. In more detail, at the beginning of each hand, each player simultaneously selects and reveals one card from their hand, with the color of this card representing their "pain" color. In the trick-taking card game Stick 'Em, first released as Sticheln, players seek to gather points each hand by taking as many cards as possible of all but one color, while trying to avoid cards of one color of their choosing. ![]()
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