Remember I said that you get more points if you win more tricks? That’s true… unless you win 10 or more of the 13 tricks, at which point you become “Greedy” in this fairytale, you get 0 points, and your humble loser of an opponent gets the maximum of 6 points. So in the above pic, if I lead a trick with the 6 of Moons and you couldn’t follow it and played a 1 of Keys, you’d win the trick.īut maybe you don’t want to! Because now, finally, I can do my magician-like reveal of the rule that powers Fox in the Forest and makes this back-and-forth so exciting. In the above picture it’s the 10 of Keys. This is the trump suit, and it always wins. In Fox in the Forest, one final card is dealt face-up in the centre of the table at the start of the round. You can then play any card you want, with varying results. Where things get crafty is if you can’t follow a trick, like if I led the trick with the 6 of Moons but you aren’t holding any Moons. Since Fox in the Forest only has 33 cards in total, you’re partly playing a simple gambling game where you’re guesstimating what cards your opponent is holding. Since you’re both dealt 13 cards at the start of a round and you don’t draw new ones, this results in a narrowing possibility space as you play cards back and forth until the 13th “trick” is you both just dropping your 13th card on the table and seeing who takes it. You examine the scene in front of you, throw out some bait, and try to catch your opponent.Īnd here’s a tip! By laddering the tricks you’ve won (pictured above) you’ll look like a stony pro even if you have no idea what you’re doing. Winning a trick also lets you lead the next trick, forcing your opponent to play something else. ![]() In Fox in the Forest this is a good thing, because at the end of the round you get points depending on how many tricks you won. The person who played the higher Moon “takes the trick”, meaning they take the cards you both played and put them in a little pile. So in the 2 player game Fox in the Forest, if I played a 6 of Moons, you’d have to play a Moon too, if you have one. The other player must then play a card of the same suit from their own hand. To play, one player first “leads” the trick by playing a card from their hand. In a trick-taking game each player holds a hand of cards. ![]() Just stick with me! Now, feather the accelerator! The ACCELERATOR! That’s what we call the gas pedal in England do it oh god the mud is in my shoes We can through this mud together, reader! You get in the driver’s seat, I’ll get out and push. But we’re going to do it, here and now, in SU&SD’s famous spirit of accessibility. The board gaming scene has a habit of not explaining what “trick-taking” is, probably because it’s a huge pain in the ass to teach. That’s a pretty momentous statement, right? Well, now we’re going to lose all of that momentum as I plunge this review-car up to its axles in mud, because Fox in the Forest is a trick-taking game. Quinns: The Fox in the Forest is the best small-box card game I’ve played in two years. The Fox in the Forest, Card Games, Games for Two, New to Games?, Quick Games, SU&SD Recommends, Archaeology: The New Expedition
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