Who is the luckiest tennis player in the world? Tennidice is a 2-or-4-player game that simulates an actual tennis match. Instead of using rackets, you need some dice, and also, you use the strategy cubes to strengthen your abilities to win, but sometimes lucky opponents don’t allow you to succeed! You can play Tennidice in two different modes: 1....
User review: The game is scored exactly as the sport: A player must win a set by a two game margin. The first player (or team) to win six sets claims victory. The game consists of two separate decks of cards: the Serve Deck and the Play Deck. Each player is dealt ten cards (or seven, when playing doubles) from the Play Deck. Players must use these cards...
One player rolls two dice and choose two cards (from the deck of nine cards). First card along with one die determines first part of the ball flight. First card is always revealed so your opponent can see it. In the first part of the ball flight, only important thing is that the ball cross over the net on the opponent's side of court. On that point your...
From the back of the box: The worldwide popularity of tennis has been boosted in recent years by the emergence of true super-stars earning fabulous dums [sic] in the form of prize money. As a board game for the entire family "TENNIS" brings all of the excitement of a hectic international tennis season to your living room table. You are the "pro" who has...
Tennis dice is a dice game for two players simulating a game of lawn tennis. There are five dice in the game: a yellow Service die, two Rally dice (red for the server, blue for the receiver) and two Scoring 'dice' which are used to keep score. The server rolls the yellow dice and if the result is 'in' the players roll their Rally die alternately until a...
From the box: "A game of chance and skill simulating lawn tennis". In point of fact, chance definitely takes the upper hand over skill here: players try to position serves and returns but the outcome of every shot (and the players' positions on the court as well!) is determined by a set of 5 6-sided dice. The probability of winning a rally for either...
(Please note: there is no publication date on this game. The date entered above is an estimate.) A simple tennis game. It comes with a board, a cardboard "ball" token, a deck of movement cards, and a deck of action cards for each player. Each action card deck contains a result for a serve and a volley (e.g. "Ace on serve, Smash to Crosscourt...
One of Waddingtons' Target Series games, aimed at the customer on a strict budget. Each player has a plastic 'racket' that is rather like a see-saw. You put the 'ball' onto your racket, push the handle of the racket down and, hopefully, the ball would land within the confines of the board. If successful, your opponent now returns the ball in the same way....
This is a tennis simulation. The board is made from cloth, the ball is velcro-covered. The "players" are catapult-like tennis rackets, with which the ball is shot over the net. A stamina point is deducted from the original points of a player for each square on the board he/she has to "run" to the place the ball landed. A player whose stamina is reduced to...
Goldsieber attempts to capture the feel of tennis in this oddball dexterity game. Each player has a still tennis player figure which is used to volley the ball back and forth across the net. Under each player, and under the translucent surface of the board is the movement paddle for that player, which dictates how far the playing figure could move for the...