Take it Easy! (1983)
ag.gameitem.AGID:
Playtime: 20
Min. Age: 10
Number of Players:
1 - 8
ag.gameitem.publisher:
Burley Games,
White Goblin Games,
IELLO,
Brain Picnic,
Zvata Studios,
Rebel Sp. z o.o.,
Cappelen,
förlAgo AB,
Zacatrus,
Arclight Games,
Swan Panasia Co., Ltd.,
Cranio Creations,
F.X. Schmid,
Ravensburger,
Eagle-Gryphon Games,
DiceTree Games,
Spear's Games,
Play Smart
Designers:
Peter Burley
Artists:
Franz Vohwinkel,
Peter Burley,
Alexander Strohmaier,
Steve Tolley,
Thomas Weiss
Mechanics:
Pattern Building,
Bingo,
Tile Placement
Beschreibung
It's really difficult to succinctly describe this game, so take a look at the pictures! Take It Easy is a true multi-player solitaire in which each player individually completes a hexagon-shaped board with spots for 19 hexagon tiles. There's no limit to number of players if you've got enough sets on hand. One person (the caller) draws a tile randomly and tells the others which of the 27 tiles featuring colored/numbered lines crossing in three directions, with numbers from 1 to 9, it is. "The 9-8-7," for example. Each player then chooses which empty spot on his own board he'll play the 9-8-7. This is repeated until the boards are filled.
The idea is to complete same-numbered lines across your board. Scoring is calculated by multiplying the number on the tile with the number of tiles in the completed line. A complete column of three 9s is worth 27, for example...but a lot of players will hope for five 9s to fill the big column down the middle.
Take It Easy is often compared to Bingo because of the familiar pattern of a number being called and then everybody looking at their cards to play it, and then scoring if a line is completed. But that's as far as the comparison goes. Bingo is sheer luck; Take It Easy is a game of skill.
It's really difficult to succinctly describe this game, so take a look at the pictures! Take It Easy is a true multi-player solitaire in which each player individually completes a hexagon-shaped board with spots for 19 hexagon tiles. There's no limit to number of players if you've got enough sets on hand. One person (the caller) draws a tile randomly and tells the others which of the 27 tiles featuring colored/numbered lines crossing in three directions, with numbers from 1 to 9, it is. "The 9-8-7," for example. Each player then chooses which empty spot on his own board he'll play the 9-8-7. This is repeated until the boards are filled.
The idea is to complete same-numbered lines across your board. Scoring is calculated by multiplying the number on the tile with the number of tiles in the completed line. A complete column of three 9s is worth 27, for example...but a lot of players will hope for five 9s to fill the big column down the middle.
Take It Easy is often compared to Bingo because of the familiar pattern of a number being called and then everybody looking at their cards to play it, and then scoring if a line is completed. But that's as far as the comparison goes. Bingo is sheer luck; Take It Easy is a game of skill.
Verwandte Spiele
ag.gameitem.lastUpdated: 2025-04-21 00:09:01.147