Table feel
Quadrago has a high level of direct confrontation and strategic depth in confrontation. Players need to pay frequent attention to each other's strategies and turns. However, there is less emphasis on cooperation in the game.
Players
2
Time
?-?
Age
?+
Weight
2
Rating
6.41
Teaching signal
High replayability
Highly interactive
Scales well
Deep strategy
More strategic control
Quadrago has a high level of direct confrontation and strategic depth in confrontation. Players need to pay frequent attention to each other's strategies and turns. However, there is less emphasis on cooperation in the game.
Quadrago has a high replayability score due to its high variability gameboard, expansions available, strategic depth, scalability, and moderate easiness to learn.
Quadrago has a moderate level of randomness impact, with random elements having a notable but not exclusive impact on the game outcome. However, players have substantial ability to mitigate randomness through strategic decisions and planning. The game outcome is primarily determined by player strategy and decisions, with luck playing a minor role.
Derivative of line and stacking games like Score Four, players alternate turns placing a wooden bead of their color onto a board consisting of 16 steel bars in a 4x4 grid. The object is to get 4 beads of your color in a row. Each bar can hold 4 beads to give a third dimension to the strategy. The added twist that separates this from Score Four is that the middle four bars can also rotate to switch positions to add more complexity to the game. Similar to: Score Four - You of course don't have to spin the center four posts...
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