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Robo Rally
This classic strategy game of robot survival gets a new look, designed in partnership with its original designer, Richard Garfield, and Hasbro.
Players choose a robot and direct its moves by playing cards. Chaos ensues as all players reveal the cards they\'ve chosen. Players face obstacles like industrial lasers, gaping pits, and moving conveyor belts, but those can also be used to their advantage! Each player aims to make it to each of the checkpoints in numerical order.
Dungeon Decorators
From time beyond memory, a great evil overlord has plagued the land, his ruthless cruelty matched only by his ruthlessly poor decorating taste. That evil overlord has died, and numerous pretenders are vying to take over his throne. And everyone knows that the first step on the journey to becoming a legendary evil boss is to set up a nefarious lair.
Photosynthesis
In this beautiful and unique game, several varieties of trees compete to grow and spread their seeds in the sunlight of the forest. Take your trees through their lifecycle, from seedling to full bloom to rebirth, and earn points as their leaves collect energy from the revolving sun’s rays. Carefully pick where you sow and when you grow, as trees in the shadows are blocked from light, and from points.
Q-bitz
Say goodbye to boredom and challenge your mind and each other with this family-fun puzzle game!
Round one is all about speed, round two requires a bit of luck and round three tests brain power!
Q-bitz Solo
Use Q-bitz Solo as a solitaire challenge or to add another player, a new colour and additional pattern cards to the original Q-bitz game.
Bosk
Bosk
From majestic Maples to ancestral Oaks, players nurture their trees aiming to thrive over the course of a year in a beautiful National Park.
In the spring, players carefully grow their trees, scoring as hikers enjoy traveling the trails in summer.
Ctrl
In Ctrl, players try to dominate a cube by crawling over it with their colored bricks, preferably covering other players\' bricks along the way.
In more detail, you start with a 3×3×3 cube that has one block of each player color stuck into one of the cube\'s holes. (In a two-player game, each player controls two colors, but at the start of play they secretly choose one of those colors to be their scoring color, with the other color serving only as a blocking mechanism.) Each player has a matching colored flag that sticks out of their block.