Thanks for the review Tom! For those reading the comments, note that it plays 10 out of the box (not 8) and you can add more players with meeples/coins/etc. It is advertised for 8+ (not 12+ as the video shows) and we've had great success playing it with kids as young as 4. As usual, the age recommendation is more about product safety and rules comprehension rather than the age that can participate.
Amazing looking game. If you need a new customer base outside of the Gaming community I would look into graphics and branding, or maybe Digital media school, this would be a hit. I'm a designer so this is a must-buy for me.
@@sweatt4237 When we prototyped it with a couple groups of just graphic designers, the results were outstanding. One group even did away with the normal rules and tried calling out Pantone colors and then waited to see if the others were close!
I love this game! I was lucky to be a beta tester and we had the best time, playing this with people of all ages. I think families around the world are going to love this game!
they really should have made a nice fun list of recognisable objects with their matching colour as an alternate gameplay, then theres no disputing how wrong the persons choice was
Really enjoyed this on the marathon yesterday! Hope to get a copy when it releases! (According to designer - June at hobby stores and August at all Target locations)
Really good review, but terrible sound, and I'm a bit dismayed that Dice Tower didn't do a do-over on the sound: very unprofessional and would make me think twice about using your reviews again. Sorry folks!
Here's my comments in yesterday's BGG video: First, since I'm sure it'll come up. Even though this game is about color, it is friendly to people with color deficiencies. Because it is about color perception matching, and not about "what color is this object", a person with deficiencies can compete. Where they see an apple, for example, on the grid will closely line up with where everyone else sees an apple. In fact, even those of us without diagnosed deficiencies see colors differently! This feature was playtested with multiple publishers, during our own playtests and shown to a board certified ophthalmologist. He commented that the only person who could not play were those who only see in grayscale and those have typically had some sort of serious trauma to cause that to happen (meaning, extremely rare).
A bit of a mic issue
hate that cronch
He really needs to start using a boom mic instead of a mic attached to his shirt.
@@jumpyg1258 I thought the mic was inside of a balloon filled with other smaller balloons
Thanks for the review Tom! For those reading the comments, note that it plays 10 out of the box (not 8) and you can add more players with meeples/coins/etc. It is advertised for 8+ (not 12+ as the video shows) and we've had great success playing it with kids as young as 4. As usual, the age recommendation is more about product safety and rules comprehension rather than the age that can participate.
Good job designing this game! Looks so fun!
Amazing looking game. If you need a new customer base outside of the Gaming community I would look into graphics and branding, or maybe Digital media school, this would be a hit. I'm a designer so this is a must-buy for me.
@@sweatt4237 When we prototyped it with a couple groups of just graphic designers, the results were outstanding. One group even did away with the normal rules and tried calling out Pantone colors and then waited to see if the others were close!
I played this back when it was called Guess Hue. Loved it back then and can't wait to buy a copy.
Guess Hue is such a good name.
Snap crackle and pop
I love this game! I was lucky to be a beta tester and we had the best time, playing this with people of all ages. I think families around the world are going to love this game!
🤤 I want it... I already bought Farben, Pantone and Colorful (what color is that) for perfect themed game night...just waiting for this one
As a colourblind individual I could never.
they really should have made a nice fun list of recognisable objects with their matching colour as an alternate gameplay, then theres no disputing how wrong the persons choice was
Really enjoyed this on the marathon yesterday! Hope to get a copy when it releases!
(According to designer - June at hobby stores and August at all Target locations)
Really good review, but terrible sound, and I'm a bit dismayed that Dice Tower didn't do a do-over on the sound: very unprofessional and would make me think twice about using your reviews again. Sorry folks!
Does it even make sense to discuss how this works with people who are colorblind?
Here's my comments in yesterday's BGG video:
First, since I'm sure it'll come up. Even though this game is about color, it is friendly to people with color deficiencies. Because it is about color perception matching, and not about "what color is this object", a person with deficiencies can compete. Where they see an apple, for example, on the grid will closely line up with where everyone else sees an apple. In fact, even those of us without diagnosed deficiencies see colors differently! This feature was playtested with multiple publishers, during our own playtests and shown to a board certified ophthalmologist. He commented that the only person who could not play were those who only see in grayscale and those have typically had some sort of serious trauma to cause that to happen (meaning, extremely rare).
and how does it work for players who are totally blind?
@@finnkrogstad2541 lol thank you. BGG nerds are elitist prudes.
@@finnkrogstad2541 LOL, as well as any other game I assume! ;)
@@wscottbrady Probably not as well as Nyctophobia.
What if you're colorblind?
You will lose the game. Simple.
Very nice.
The sound is horrible. You should just rerecord this.