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Sherlock: Death on the 4th of July
In each Q case you try to solve a mystery case with 32 clues.
Play in turns, one player at a time, until all cards have been revealed or discarded.
Match Madness
Be the fastest to recreate with your blocks the pattern shown on a card to win the card. The player with the most cards at the end of the game is the winner.
Anomia
Anomia: [uh-NO-mee-uh] – Noun –
1) A problem with word finding or recall.
2) Chaos.
3) The game where common knowledge becomes uncommonly fun!
Anomia 2.0
Welcome to Anomia 2.0! Introducing two brand new decks into the world of Anomia. Race to find matches, call out categories and test your brain among the chaos.
The game where common knowledge is STILL uncommonly fun!
Picture Perfect: 5-6 Player Expansion
The expansion contains enough material for a 5th and 6th player. Including alternatively illustrated screens and special exchange cards, which are specially designed for these numbers of players.
Picture Perfect
How do you take the perfect picture of a group of people if you only have one try? Each character has different wishes. Some want to be at the front of the picture; some want to stand next to another; and some really don\'t want to be next to that one particular person by any means. Do your best to make everyone happy ? even if you don\'t actually know all the characters\' preferences?
Spyfall
Everyone gets a card showing the same location - except for the Spy, who just gets told that they are the spy. Can the players ask the right questions to work out who the spy is without giving away their location? An exquisitely hilarious party game of bluffing, deduction and suspicion
Cryptid
You\'ve studied the footage, connected the dots, and gathered what meagre evidence you could. You\'re close - soon the whole world will know the truth behind the Cryptid. A group of like-minded cryptozoologists have come together to finally uncover the elusive creature, but the glory of discovery is too rich to share. Without giving away some of what you know you will never succeed in locating the beast, but reveal too much and your name will be long forgotten!
Rorschach
Rorschach, named after the Swiss psychiatrist Hermann Rorschach, uses some of his famous inkblot images (and many new ones) to put two teams to the test. The teams earn points by correctly guessing how their members paired randomly selected words with these inkblot images.