I discovered Sutakku at PAX East this year. Smirk & Dagger were there at a booth, which had the game on display. I'd spotted the dice from across the crowded hall, and they looked gorgeous. Then later that night around midnight we lucked out and found a copy we could check out of the game library. I'd been looking for a light, cheap and small game to get at PAX as a memento. Sutakku was perfect. We played it 4 times in a row and only stopped because we wanted to immediately try to purchase it. Luckily for us, we went over to the Smirk & Dagger booth and sure enough someone was still there, even past Midnight. Me and a friend happily bought copies around 1 am.
I love board games. But I love picking them apart more. Updates every Monday.
Showing posts with label Sutakku. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sutakku. Show all posts
Sunday, April 21, 2013
Sutakku Review
Sutakku came out in 2011 from Smirk & Dagger Games. It was designed by Curt Covet according to BoardGameGeek, however the manual tells this charming story about how it's an old Japanese game that evolved over time, supposedly to teach lessons about risk versus reward. It's a push your luck dice game with an interesting aesthetic and a very fun "take that" variant.
I discovered Sutakku at PAX East this year. Smirk & Dagger were there at a booth, which had the game on display. I'd spotted the dice from across the crowded hall, and they looked gorgeous. Then later that night around midnight we lucked out and found a copy we could check out of the game library. I'd been looking for a light, cheap and small game to get at PAX as a memento. Sutakku was perfect. We played it 4 times in a row and only stopped because we wanted to immediately try to purchase it. Luckily for us, we went over to the Smirk & Dagger booth and sure enough someone was still there, even past Midnight. Me and a friend happily bought copies around 1 am.
I discovered Sutakku at PAX East this year. Smirk & Dagger were there at a booth, which had the game on display. I'd spotted the dice from across the crowded hall, and they looked gorgeous. Then later that night around midnight we lucked out and found a copy we could check out of the game library. I'd been looking for a light, cheap and small game to get at PAX as a memento. Sutakku was perfect. We played it 4 times in a row and only stopped because we wanted to immediately try to purchase it. Luckily for us, we went over to the Smirk & Dagger booth and sure enough someone was still there, even past Midnight. Me and a friend happily bought copies around 1 am.
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