はないちもんめ (Hana Ichi Monme) is a bluffing card game from Japan for 2 or 3 players. The title means something like 'flower position'. Each player has a set of seven cards in their own colour. Some cards are Warabe (children) and some are Ayakashi (weird). If a player can give away all their weird cards by the end, they win. Otherwise, points are calculated....
From the author's web site: Flower arrangements or fireworks? The choice is yours! This box proposes you two colorful games: Hanabi, a cooperative game in which the players realize together colored fireworks. Ikebana, a competitive game in which the players compete to compose blazing bouquets. The games use the same material, a set of 55 cards and some...
For the newest edition of Hanabi yet, expect a redesign, card stands, and three expansions included • Avalanche of colors (10 multicolored cards) • Black powder (10 black cards) • 5 flamboyants (6 bonus tiles and a player sheet) Hanabi—named for the Japanese word for "fireworks"—is a cooperative game in which players try to create the perfect fireworks...
The mini-expansion includes 5 new cards of multicolored fireworks, the rule "Avalanche of colors" and variant "Choreography timed". This sixth fireworks is much more difficult to realize, but you can now earn up to 30 points! Hanabi is a cooperative game in which the players realize together coloured fireworks. They are going to try to recompose suites of...
Hanabi: Die Bonus-Plättchen, also known as Hanabi: Master Artisan Expansion, adds six bonus tokens to the Hanabi card game. The deluxe version of the expansion adds six bonus tiles to the Hanabi Deluxe base game. Hanabi Deluxe II already contains the 6 tiles of the Master Artisan Expansion. Shuffle these tokens face down, then place them near the clue...
Hanabi: Black Powder is the 2nd expansion for Hanabi. It adds 10 cards to the game to create a special 6th Fireworks display! Black Powder card are never part of color clues, they must be played from 5 to 1, and there are three 5s and one 1 instead. It is compatible with the base R&R version of the game (European versions of the game are not compatible...
Hanabi is a card game for 2-5 players designed by Luke Morris in 2012. It's the city's big summer festival. As the hot, happy afternoon has worn on there has been much drinking, eating and laughter from the crowds bustling around the brightly coloured stalls. Now as the sun sets, the people take to the grassy banks of the nearby river to watch the...
Hanafuda cards originated in beginning of 18th-century Japan. Legend says stewards of Edo Shogunate created it from Portuguese playing cards. A deck consists of forty-eight cards divided into twelve suits of four cards each. Each suit represents one of the twelve months of the year or individual plants (almost all flowers). The cards are small (about 1 x 2...
A variant of the traditional Japanese card game 'Hanafuda', this deck of cards is specifically designed for the Hawaiian Style game known as 'Sakura'. Two to six people can play, either individually or as teams of two. The 48 cards are divided into twelve 'hiki' or suits, each corresponding to a specific month. The four cards in each hiki have 20, 10, 5...
Sakura is an hawaian version played with Hanafuda cards: This version is similar to the Koï Koï version of Hanafuda as we capture a card in the river (also called 'Ba') with a card of the same month we have in hands, then we reveal a card from the main deck. If this card can capture another card of the ba, we can take it. We play all of our cards (8 if we...
HANAMI / 花見 is a game from Japan in which players enjoy the cherry blossom in Spring. All over Japan, parks and gardens are full of cherry trees in full bloom, and Japanese people enjoy Hanami, sitting under the blossom to eat and drink and party. publisher's summary This is a strategic territory capture game with a new and changing board and easy-to-play...