Hanabi (card game)

Hanabi

The box cover of Hanabi
Designer(s) Antoine Bauza
Publisher(s) Asmodée Éditions
Players 2 to 5
Age range 8 and up
Setup time 5 minutes
Playing time 20-30 minutes
Random chance Medium
Skill(s) required Deduction, Memory, Cooperation, Planning

Hanabi is a cooperative card game published in 2010[1] in which players, aware of other players' cards but not their own, attempt to play a series of cards in a specific order to set off a simulated fireworks show. Players are limited in the types of information they may give to other players, and in the total amount of information that can be given during the game. In 2013, Hanabi won the Spiel des Jahres, a prestigious industry award for best board game of the year.

Gameplay

The Hanabi deck contains cards in five suits (white, yellow, green, blue, and red): three ones, two each of twos, threes, and fours, and one five. The game begins with 8 available information tokens and 3 fuse tokens. To start the game, players are dealt a hand containing five cards (four for 4 or 5 players). As in Indian poker, each player holds his cards so that other players can see them but he cannot. Play proceeds around the table; each turn, a player must take one of the following actions:

Players lose immediately if all fuse tokens are gone, and win immediately if all fives have been played successfully. Otherwise play continues until the deck becomes empty, and for one full round after that. At the end of the game, the values of the highest cards in each suit are summed, resulting in a total score out of a possible 25 points.

Variants

Awards

References

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