In Divvy Dice, your goal is to score as many points as possible by completing your cards. You can play them in a single row or column, but that may make your life harder, later. Deal each player two, and then place four face-up along the top half of the Market:ĭo the same thing for the Bonus Cards each player should get two, and four more should go face-up along the bottom half of the Market:įinally, choose a player to go first and distribute the appropriate Tally Cards, or shuffle them and use that to determine who goes first:įrom the four cards they have, each player now returns one card to the bottom of its deck, and plays the remaining three in some configuration so that they are adjacent to each other. What peril awaits you? You’ll just have to keep reading and find out! Contents The problem is that a lot of the cards can’t be completed so easily. Dead simple, right? Game’s over in 9 turns, maybe a few more. The problem is that basically every turn, you’re going to have to try to complete a card. In Divvy Dice, you’ve got to try to avoid splitting things up! But it’s not so simple. Hope that by the time you read this, things are better! Onto Divvy Dice! We’ve had some exciting things happen, but it’s been a pretty tough 12 months. Either way, I appreciate y’all sticking with the site through a tumultuous year. I’m hoping to burn some time before the end of the month fulfilling a few more of these reviews before things really wrap up so that I’m a bit more ahead of the curve in 2021 than I have been this year. Which is nice! It means I’m back to almost something approximating normal, as opposed to being a bit behind the 8 ball for a few weeks / months / all of 2020. I suppose this is an exciting milestone, in that I’m not totally sure when this review is going to be published. Full disclosure: A review copy of Divvy Dice was provided by Stronghold Games.
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