9th October 2022 Another Sunday and another gaming session on Board Game Arena. Do the roll and bump and put the trick taking back. Do the roll and bump and put the trick taking back. When the dice are good, so are you. Next time you roll, you know what to do. Do the roll and bump and put the trick taking back. OK, dodgy references to 80's adverts aside, Roll'n Bump blends trick taking, set collecting with a dash of push your luck into a interesting little dice game. Caveat: we've only played Roll'n Bump digitally. What's in a game?
Each of the 4 colours used on cards also have a unique pattern associated with them. This is a good accessibility feature. The joker card is of course the exception, having all 4 colours and all 4 pattern types on it. Otherwise, the game has no artwork. There's almost no iconography to the game either. There's only the 3 types of card to learn and that's trivially easy to learn. How's it play? Setup
On to play Players roll dice to create tricks to place on cards and then claim those cards in which in turn scores them VPs. Depending on the available cards, there are 3 ways this can be done. Additionally, the active player has the possibility of 'bumping' other players' dice. I.e., the other player's dice are removed from the card and replacing by those of the active player! Roll'n Bump uses the typical turn order of the active player taking their turn before play progresses to the player on their left. On their turn, the active player takes the following actions.
Endgame Play continues until one of the decks has been emptied (The joker does not count.), when this occurs, all players immediately claim cards they have dice on and the game goes to scoring. Scoring All cards score in 2 ways, firstly they score their base VPs but then they also score as sets as per their colours: The more cards in a colour set, the more bonus VPs it earns. The joker can be added to any single colour set as chosen by the owning player. Points are tallied, highest score wins. Overall
Roll'n Bump is such a pared down game focused on the core of its push-your-luck driven gameplay without almost no 'schticks' that it's hard to find much to write about! It does exactly what it says on the tin. It has fairly straightforward, light rules which can be picked up very quickly, especially since it utilises mechanics which will be familiar in some way or other to many people. Creating straights or sets, rerolling dice twice, it's all common stuff. Roll'n Bump would make a good crossover game. Decision making is also pretty straightforward. Players must recognise and decide when and how to push their luck. Roll'n Bump provides a classic risk-and-reward conundrum; settle for a low-scoring card or risk reducing that score to 0 to potentially score a different, higher value card. Despite the overall simplicity of Roll'n Bump, there is a innovative mechanic to be found in the game; the bonus die. I like how it can give an edge to a player without giving them extra dice to place. Being able to bump other players' used dice from the bonus dice can provide players with meaningful decisions. There will be times when a player might not put a die on a card because it could be used to acquire the bonus die for their next turn. If I had one criticism of Roll'n Bump and considering it's a push-your-luck game, it might be a facetious criticism, it's that there's a lot of luck to the game! Taking some big risks to put some dice on a card only to have another player flippantly bump them with a single lucky roll can be pretty frustrating. Sometimes, someone will win simply because they lucked into a very good roll but that's the nature of the beast and something anyone playing this type of game should come to expect. Roll'n Bump is unremarkable and doesn't really stand out from the crowd however it manages to tick all the right boxes for a push-your-luck trick taking game and offers a solid, simple and fun game without any associated fiddliness. It also has a fairly quick playtime and would serve as a good filler or finisher game which is why we actually play it on a fairly regular basis. If you're on the look out for a push-your-luck, trick taking game, Roll'n Bump is worth considering.
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