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ELA Standard 4


Max

Average: 4.8 (4 votes)
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Maximum Number of Players: 
8 Players
Length of Play: 
15 Minutes

Players work cooperatively to help get a bird, chipmunk and mouse back home before Max, the cat, catches them.

Players take turns rolling the dice and discussing which creatures to move to in an effort to foil Max's attempt at catching them.

Lord of the Rings

Average: 3.5 (2 votes)
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Maximum Number of Players: 
5 Players
Length of Play: 
45 Minutes

In this game you become a member of the Fellowship by playing one of the hobbits. This is your chance to prove that you are worthy to save Middle Earth. It is the collective aim of the players to destroy the Ring and collect as many shields as possible. The shields symbolize each player's contribution to driving back the dark forces, but they will count only if the Fellowship sticks together and is successful as a whole. Without co-operation there can be no success. There is no individual winner - the group scores points as a whole.

Citadels

Average: 4 (1 vote)
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Maximum Number of Players: 
7 Players
Length of Play: 
30 Minutes

In Citadels, you are a medieval ruler trying to complete your city before your opponents can build theirs. Expand your city by adding new districts, but be sure to invest wisely: some districts are more valuable than others, but cost more gold to build.

There is more to ruling a city than gold, however. Lords, ladies, and other nobility all have a role to play. The game changes each turn as each player secretly chooses a new role - the assassin, thief, magician, king, bishop, merchant architect or warlord - and the power that comes with it.

Nanofictionary

Average: 3 (1 vote)
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Maximum Number of Players: 
6 Players
Length of Play: 
30 Minutes

Nanofictionary is a game about telling tiny stories. You might say it's like a miniature short story writing contest in the form of a card game. Even an extremely short narrative can tell a complete short story, provided it contains each of the four specific "plot devices", namely: a Setting, a Problem, at least one Character, and a Resolution.