玩家评分: 6.3

拥有
呛辣鼠
Rat Hot

桌游极客排名: 4093

本月排名变化: 28

玩家评分: 6.3

玩家人数: 2 (最佳: 2人)

时长: 30 分钟

难度: 1.46 (毛线)

适合年龄: 8+

专业评分: 5.78

语言依赖:

无依赖

出版年份: 2005

出版商:

| Queen Games | (Web published)

设计师:

| Michael Schacht

美工:

| Jörg Asselborn | Hans-Jörg Brehm | Michael Schacht

桌游类别:

|抽象 |即印即玩

两个香料经销商与一些饥肠辘辘的老鼠分享一个仓库,想要把它们停产。两个经销商想要储存香料,以便他们知道所有的东西,但他们也必须保持老鼠在海湾。堆叠你的箱子,保持你的香料在一起,掩盖老鼠。

&这又是由他的游戏Dschunke发展而且也是由女王出版的。大鼠热瓦片分布与Dschunke略有不同:das Legespiel,但是您可以使用大鼠热套装几乎可以使用Dschunke:das Legespiel规则。所有游戏都使用堆叠长3x1瓦片的巧妙机制使得上面的瓦片掩盖下面的瓦片的一些部分。在“大鼠热”中,两名球员简单地轮流从一张面朝下的桩上画出2张瓦片,并将它们添加到现有的布局中。#10;

瓷砖均为1x3,并显示大鼠,香料或空箱子每个玩家在玩家颜色中都有四种不同类型的香料,他们试图形成大群体。许多瓷砖都有两种颜色的香料。

这个游戏得分为灰色和黄色的芯片,代表1和2分。每次放置瓦片时,您和您的对手都可以从该瓦片创建或更改的组中得分。每当一组两个相同的香料形成时,拥有的玩家会收到一个点,或两个点,三个或更多的组。谨防!如果在你回合结束时有三只自己的颜色的老鼠可以看到,你马上就会输了。

当绘图桩耗尽,瓦片全部放置时,所有玩家再次打进板,所以试图保留现有的群体也是重要的。游戏中的真正诀窍在于平铺位置。瓷砖必须至少与一个正方形相邻。瓷砖可以放置在其他瓷砖的顶部,从而堆积起来。但是瓷砖不能完全坐在另一个顶部,所以必须总是有一些偏移,并且瓷砖的所有三个正方形必须由其他图块或表格支持。

Rat Hot可以很棘手你想让你的对手的老鼠暴露在尴尬的地方,所以他们必须花费这两个动作来保持老鼠的覆盖。但是你也想设置得分位置,并且覆盖自己的老鼠,并且避免给你的对手点。在这里有一个很好的精神挑战,因为你可以琢磨你的瓷砖的最佳使用和安排。你敢打开你的两只老鼠,因为你的对手可能会吸取更多的老鼠,使你不可能完成你的下一回合,少于三个显示。你能得到一大批香料,还会打破你的对手的团体吗?棘手的问题,棘手的头脑。

Rat Hot是一个快速,有趣的游戏,是女王系列小型2人游戏的一个很好的补充。木片让人很容易看到谁是领先者,瓷砖是很好的制作,图形很有趣,游戏玩得很快,公平。你可以用不幸的瓦片画来填充,但也许你的低分与你的选择有关,或者也许另一个玩家比你更聪明。快速玩耍,规矩简单,猝死的风险让Rat Hot具有很高的重播价值。

Two spice dealers share a storehouse with a number of hungry rats, who want to put them out of business. The two dealers want to store spices so that they know where everything is, but they also have to keep the rats at bay. Stack your crates, keep your spices together, and cover up the rats. Rat Hot is a two-player game developed from Michael Schacht's Dschunke: Das Legespiel on his own label Spiel aus Timbuktu, which in turn was developed from his game Dschunke, also published by Queen. The Rat Hot tile distribution differs slightly from Dschunke: das Legespiel but you can very nearly use the Dschunke: das Legespiel rules with a Rat Hot set. All the games use the clever mechanism of stacking long 3x1 tiles so that the upper tiles obscure some parts of the tiles underneath. In Rat Hot, the two players simply take turns to draw 2 tiles from a face down pile, and add them to the existing layout. The tiles are all 1x3 and show a combination of rats, spices or empty crates. Each player has four different types of spice in their player colour which they are trying to form into large groups. Many of the tiles have spices of both colours. The game is scored with grey and yellow chips which represent 1 and 2 points. Each time you place a tile, you and your opponent can score points from groups created or changed by that tile. Whenever a group of two of the same spice is formed, the owning player receives one point, or two points for groups of three or more. Beware! If there are three rats of your own colour visible at the end of your turn, you instantly lose. When the draw pile is exhausted and the tiles all placed, the board is scored once more for all players, so trying to preserve existing groups also counts. The real trick in the game comes in the tile placement. Tiles must be adjacent by at least one square. Tiles can placed on top of other tiles, so that stacks build up. But a tile can not sit exactly on top of another, so there must always be some offset, and all three squares of a tile must be supported by other tiles, or the table. Rat Hot can be very tricky. You want to keep your opponent's rats exposed in awkward places, so they have to spend both their moves trying to keep the rats covered. But you also want to set up scoring positions, and cover your own rats, and avoid giving your opponent points as well. There's a good mental challenge here, as you puzzle over the best use and arrangement of your tiles. Do you dare leave two of your rats open, because your opponent may draw more of your rats and make it impossible for you to finish your next turn with less than three showing. Can you get a good group of spices going and also break up your opponent's groups? Tricky problems for tricky minds. Rat Hot is a quick, fun game and is a good addition to Queen's line of small 2-player games. The wood chips make it easy to see who is leading, the tiles are nicely made, the graphics are fun, and the game plays quickly and fairly. You can be stuffed by unlucky tile draws, but perhaps your low score is more to do with your choices, or maybe the other player is just smarter than you. Fast play, easy rules, and the risk of sudden death give Rat Hot a high replay value.