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Duck Duck BruceEnglish language edition of Kleine FischeList Price: $10.99
from 4 customer reviews
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Look out ducks, make way for Bruce! In this quacked-up card game, ducks are waddling everywhere -- the circus, the beach, even the moon -- and Bruce is hot on their tails. Gather the most high-scoring ducks by turning over cards one at a time. The more cards you reveal, the more you can collect. But if Bruce shows up, your ducks better take cover before that wily hound ruffles some feathers! Get the highest score and you're one lucky duck.
A flock of ducks waddling through bizarre locations and a rambunctious dog named Bruce. If this sounds like a strange combination for a card game, wait until you give it a try! After just one round, we guarantee you'll be barking (or quacking) for more. Remember to say "Duck!" every time you reveal a duck card and do your best to resist the temptation of turning over more cards. Oh, and Bruce loves to be scratched behind his ears, and on his belly, and well -- just about everywhere else!
This is not strategic but it is a lot of fun. This a fast game.It is like cant stop.And you sometimes have the opportunity to steal cards from another player. He wont like that but you will.You can play it with kids or with adults.They all want to play it again and again.
This is my favorite game to play with my almost 3 and almost 5 year old daughters. It strikes an excellent balance between fun, challenge, luck and learning.
It's fun, especially if you follow the rules by saying "Duck" when a duck card shows up and shouting "Bruce" when a Bruce card shows up.
It requires decision-making. This is a push-your-luck game that, I think, has many similarities to Circus Flohcati (but Duck Duck Bruce is better for kids).
You flip cards one by one until you decide to keep the cards that you have flipped or flip two of the same "suit" (there 6 cards - 1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 4 - in each of ten "suits") or flip a Bruce card (there are 6 Bruce cards). Flipping two of the same suit means you will lose some of the cards you would have been able to keep. Flipping a Bruce card means you lose all of the cards you would have been able to keep, but you will get a chance to steal a card or cards from another player.
There is some luck. Obviously, if you flip the right cards it helps a lot. However, the luck factor is not huge in this game, especially for a kids game.
Your kids can learn something while they play. At the end of the game, you will score points for one card of each "suit" that you have. So, if you have the 1, 1 and 3 card in one "suit", then you simply score 3 points in that "suit"; you score zero cards if you don't have any cards in a "suit."
My 2 year old daughter can score her own cards by matching up the cards of the same "suits" and selecting the highest number. Then, because there is a picture of the number of ducks on the card, she can also add up all of her points on her own.
Duck Duck Bruce (Gamewright, 2007 – Peter Neugebauer) sounds like the name of a bad Monty Python skit. But it’s really a card game featuring ducks and a dog named Bruce and is a simple game for children that teaches them how to push their luck. Now I’ve already reviewed a game that had similar features – Gopher it! In that review, I mentioned how I considered Gopher it! to be a “gateway” game, a game that helped children learn mechanics that they would use in many games, as they got older.
Duck Duck Bruce is similar, but it has a much higher “fun” element to it, one that will really resonate with children and their parents. The artwork is extremely cute; and while the end scoring is a bit confusing for younger children, the game has a charm that will appeal to many families. I myself found the game play merely passable – I felt a lack of control – but my kids enjoyed it so much that I found myself playing it multiple times, and not having a bad experience!
A deck of sixty-six cards is shuffled and placed on the table. The deck is made up of ten suits, each with six cards (numbered “1”, “1”, “2”, “2”, “3”, and “4”), and six “Bruce” cards. A die (numbered “-1”, “1”, “1”, “2”, “3”, and “3”) is placed near the deck, and the last person to feed a live duck goes first.
On a player’s turn, they take the top card from the deck and place it in front of them, starting a row. After this, they may either end their turn, taking all cards in the row – placing them face down in front of them, or turn over another card and add it to their row. This continues until either the player ends their turn, or
As soon as the last card from the draw pile has been revealed, all players turn over the cards that they have collected and sort them by suit, keeping only the highest number of each suit. Players add together their score and mark it on paper. Another round is started in the same way. The game ends after a certain number of rounds, time, or points – the players can decide beforehand. The player with the most points is then declared the winner!
Some comments on the game…
Duck Duck Bruce is for kids and their parents/teachers/caretakers. It’s a fun game that you’ll enjoy laughing at and playing, and kids will learn about risk taking. The game is full of simple, fun choices – from deciding how many cards to steal to how many cards to draw. You can play it until you’re sick of it – which may happen, but I think you’ll have fun before that point. Comical artwork and a funny theme help elevate this kids game to one that will be requested often. And adults won’t roll their eyes when it is.
Tom Vasel
“Real men play board games”