SuDoku: Das Brettspiel (2005)

ag.gameitem.AGID:
Playtime: 45
Min. Age: 6
Number of Players:
1 - 4
ag.gameitem.publisher:
999 Games,
KOSMOS
Designers:
Reiner Knizia
Artists:
Bertrand Born
Mechanics:
Unknown
Beschreibung
SuDoku is the abbreviation for "Suji wa dokushin ni kagiru", which means "The numbers must remain individual". Long before the game came to Europe, the Japanese were racking their brains with it. Usually Sudoku is a solitaire game, but now with SuDoku: Das Brettspiel, you can play it with up to four players.
A SuDoku consists of 9 fields with 9 squares each. In each field and in each row, both vertically and horizontally, only the numbers from 1 to 9 may appear once. Different numbers are given before the game. Now it is up to the players to find out where which of the numbers from 1 to 9 are to be entered. It is important to achieve your goal by excluding.
Since the playing field is empty at the beginning, 9 numbers are initially distributed over the 9 fields. There can only be one number in each row, each column and each square. On your turn, you place a number card in an empty space, paying attention to the laying rules. Then, receive as many points as there are numbers in the square and on the vertical and horizontal line. With each number played it becomes more difficult to accommodate your own, but you also get more points the further the game has progressed. At the end of your turn you draw a new tile. The game ends when no player can add another number without breaking the rules. The player with the most points wins. Children can play on the back of the game board on 6x6 fields. You don't use numbers for this, but animal tiles. The point rule applies as with the big ones.
SuDoku is the abbreviation for "Suji wa dokushin ni kagiru", which means "The numbers must remain individual". Long before the game came to Europe, the Japanese were racking their brains with it. Usually Sudoku is a solitaire game, but now with SuDoku: Das Brettspiel, you can play it with up to four players.
A SuDoku consists of 9 fields with 9 squares each. In each field and in each row, both vertically and horizontally, only the numbers from 1 to 9 may appear once. Different numbers are given before the game. Now it is up to the players to find out where which of the numbers from 1 to 9 are to be entered. It is important to achieve your goal by excluding.
Since the playing field is empty at the beginning, 9 numbers are initially distributed over the 9 fields. There can only be one number in each row, each column and each square. On your turn, you place a number card in an empty space, paying attention to the laying rules. Then, receive as many points as there are numbers in the square and on the vertical and horizontal line. With each number played it becomes more difficult to accommodate your own, but you also get more points the further the game has progressed. At the end of your turn you draw a new tile. The game ends when no player can add another number without breaking the rules. The player with the most points wins. Children can play on the back of the game board on 6x6 fields. You don't use numbers for this, but animal tiles. The point rule applies as with the big ones.
Verwandte Spiele
ag.gameitem.lastUpdated: 2025-04-27 15:04:58.974