Playroom Entertainment Games
This year at GenCon, Dante & I played a couple of demo games with Playroom Entertainment.  And had a great time.  So here’s my recap of our game experience with the Ligretto and On the Double card games.
Ligretto
I love Ligretto. Â It’s fast-paced and a lot of fun. Â One box with allow 4 players to play the game; you can add expansions to add more players. Â Each player gets a stack of cards that are numbered 1 to 10 on different colors: green, red, yellow & blue. Â You deal yourself a “Ligretto” deck of 10 cards, then lay out three face-up, playable cards. Â The rest you hold in your hand and flip through, three at a time. Â Anytime you come across a 1 in your three face-up cards or in your hand, you move it to start a pile in the middle of the play space. Â Then, anyone can add to that pile, sequentially matching the color. Â So I play a Green 1, Dante or anyone else at the table could play the Green 2 on that pile. Â If you play one of your three face-up cards, you replace it from the “Ligretto” deck. Â The first person to run out their “Ligretto” deck wins the round. Â Then, everyone counts the cards they have in their hand, multiplies them by two and subtracts that total from the number of cards they played on the piles. Â The first person to 99 points wins.
The trick to Ligretto is being able to keep track of all the piles in play. Â With four players, we easily had 7-10 piles on which to play, and trying to keep track of all of them is the key to winning. Â So this game is great for those of us who can multitask and keep track of so many game elements all at once. Â If you’re the kind of person who is most comfortable focusing only on one element at a time, this could be a frustrating game.
On the Double
On the Double is still a fast-paced card game, but it differs from Ligretto in one key element. Â On the Double plays on a single discard pile, so there are few game elements to track. Â The game begins by dealing the entire deck among all players. Â Then, the youngest person plays their top card to create the discard pile. Â Each card has a split personality: each side of the card has a color & shape combination. Â So you have two different shapes and two different colors on each card. Â You can play a card if you can match either the shape or color on each half of the card to the card on the top of the discard pile. Â If the top card is a yellow-cross/red-diamond, you need to find a card from your hand that is: yellow and red, or cross and diamond, or yellow-square and blue-diamond, or blue-cross and red-star or anything that would allow you to match one element on each half of the card. Â You still have to be quick to play your cards, otherwise, someone will play their card first.
Game Experience
Ligretto was my prefered game; I had a fun time keeping track of all the various game elements, and I won two of the three hands we played. Â Dante preferred On the Double, as he could focus better on the one discard pile. Â They were both very fun games, and we had a great time playing them. Â Thanks to Frank who ran the demos for us.
I recommend both games, but I encourage you to consider your game-play preference and pick the one that’s best for you. Â In the end, we brought home our own On the Double set, and we are looking forward to crazy amounts of fun as we introduce our friends to the game.