About
In 1867, the World's Fair in Paris sparked a craze for Japanese art and culture known as Japonisme. Art galleries specializing in Japanese ukiyo-e prints were established, and ukiyo-e became known around the world.
In Ukiyo-e / ã¦ãã¨ã¨, players take on the role of art dealers specializing in ukiyo-e and aim to hold successful solo ukiyo-e exhibitions. To lay down a set of cards, you need at least two cards if that type hasn't been played or more cards than are already on the table if it has been played, after which any cards of the same type on the table are discarded. The round ends when one player has six types of art (out of seven) or the deck runs out. Players score the lowest-valued card in each set on the table, which speeds up future rounds and can make sets more valuable.
Ukiyo-e is based on Michael Schacht's 2003 game Crazy Chicken, with this new version being designed in consultation with him.
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—Japanese description from the publisher
2-4
Players
30 min
Play Time
1.0
Light
10+
Age
Mechanics
Categories
More by Michael Schacht
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