We Need to Talk
(2019)
Who is this game suitable for?
Suitable for ages 14 and up. You can play with 4 to 8 players.
For the pros among you, the following mechanics can be decisive: Roles with Asymmetric Information und Targeted Clues...
Game Data
| Average time to play: | 60 |
| Minimum age: | 14 |
| Number of players: | 4 - 8 |
| Publisher: | Smirk & Laughter Games |
| Designers: | Michael Dunsmore, Bryan Merlonghi, Jordan Nichols |
| Artists: | Annette Cate |
| Mechanics: | Roles with Asymmetric Information, Targeted Clues |
A Game of Staging Ridiculous Interventions about Nonsensical Problems.
Caring friends and family have all gathered “because they LOVE you”. That’s how it always starts. That’s when you suddenly realize there’s a problem - and it’s YOU. You’re shocked and clueless, which is why your loved ones have taken it upon themselves to carefully broach the subject. Naturally, no one wants to just come right out and say it. So they keep hinting at it, hoping you’ll catch on eventually. But will you? Or will this Intervention fail?
In this game, players take turns being the focus of an intervention by drawing a Problem card with a nonsensical problem like, "Uncontrollable Interpretive Dancing" or "Neurotic Inability to Turn Right". They can't see the card, but all the Concerned Friends and Family can. Friends will give obscure clues that hint at the problem, without giving it away. The sooner the Intervened can guess the problem, the more points they'll score. The longer the Concerned Friends keep them guessing, the more points the Friends can earn. Each of the three rounds have a unique format for giving clues, Broaching the Subject, The Emotional Appeal and Offering a Solution. But if the Intervened cannot guess their problem by the end of the third round, no one will score any points, having failed to help their friend.
—description from the publisher
Alternative names:
We Need to Talk
Last Updated: 2025-08-21 04:53:20 UTC
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