This is the best Sushi Go tutorial I've come across. Super simple, and explains all the rules without the shenanigans. Would love to see more tutorials from you'll, especially Carcassonne.
Thank you very much Regan! If you scroll down our main page you'll find the sections with our English videos. There are more to be posted as soon as I can get to them. We currently have another English tutorial for Dixit, and a section on Mind Puzzling solitaires. Don't forget to subscribe to stay up to date. Carcassonne is definitely on my to-do-list ;)
Picked up this game today, couldn't get my head around the rules via the book provided. This was perfect. Thank you for your efforts! They are greatly appreciated!
Thank you for your message. I hope you have loads of fun. In case you need it, don't forget we have an 'express' version of this tutorial to teach new players how to play.
You are very welcome. This one is for the game owner, we also have the "express" tutorial which is a shorter version to teach new plsyers how to play. Games where each card type has a different "power" or "action" can be overwhelming at first. What you can do is remove the pudding, the chopsticks and the wasabi cards in your first game or play a test round. You'll get a hang of the mechanics and get used to the other cards. Then play the next game full equip. I've done this with players new to board games and it worked great.
Hey Wayne thanks for dropping by and leaving a coment. This is a fantastic game to play at home with the family and kids. Check out our other video on Dixit. That's my all time favorite for family days.
Thank you so much! I am having a Japanese party, and I can't wait to play Sushi GO. The instructions in the box are very vague and hard to understand, and this video helped me comprehend the concept of Sushi GO, and now I'm very confident on how to play! Thank you!
That's fantastic! Thanks for the heads up! Adding Sushi Go! To the party will make it lots of fun. I love the idea of theme dinner parties with theme board games to go with them. In case you haven't tried them, other great japanese style games could be Hanabi and Takenoko. Enjoy!
DO NOT PILE SHUFFLE! It does not actually randomize the cards, should be used only for counting. Use mass shuffling (6-8 times) for a truly random deck. (Use sleeves if necessary.)
Hi! Thanks for the heads up! I like using a combination of both and combining the piles from the pile shuffling at a random order. You are indeed right, pile shuffling only once is not enough to randomize all the cards.
In the rules: With a chopstick card you can play any 2 sushi cards. However there are NO SUSHI CARDS in the game. There is no distinction as to whether that means 'sushi go' cards or sushi items: sashimi, nigiri or maki. The result is I am now in Korea, and there is a huge arguement because the Korean rules specifically state that you can only use a 초밥 / (cho bap) nigiri card and nothing else. Not wasabi, not dumpling, pudding, tempura, maki, or sashimi. As the original game is English it is frustrating this issue is not directly addressed.
By Sushi cards I believe the author means game cards. There are no restrictions to the cards you can play. The author has made some clarifications on The Board Game Geek forums which is where we got the wasabi and nigiri order rule from. At times, when publishers in other countries adquire licenses, they are at times allowed to tinker the rules and quite often make translation mistakes. Both could explain what is happening in the korean version. I work translating board games and guarantee you this happens a lot. Source publishers rarely supervise the end product in other countries. Phil Walker Harding, the author of Sishi Go! is, I belive, Australian, so the game was originally published in. English.
Please tell me you are still doing this. Detailed rules explanation, making score cards, interacting in the comments. You are a treasure to have in this hobby! Thank you very much.
:) You have definitely just made my day. Thank you so so much. It is comments like yours that fuels my motivation to keep doing this. I haven't been able to make new videos lately because of work but I will surely continue creating here or at www.gamesonboard.eu Have a great day!
Thank you for this tutorial. I was a bit confused on the Chopsticks card, which you confirmed that I was playing right. However, on the Sushi Go! Party, the Chopsticks have different numbers on the bottom right of the card. Do you what these are for or how to play them?
Hi! You are very welcome. Thank you for dropping by and leaving us a comment. In Sushi Go! Party some cards like the spoons, menus, chopsticks... have that number on the bottom right corner. According to the rulebook these are used when various special actions take place during the same turn. The numbers establish the order, from lowest to highest number, in which the cards are resolved. This means that if for example in the same turn a player calls out spoon and another player calls out chopsticks, the player with the chopsticks will resolve their action before the player with the spoon because the number on the chopsticks is either 1 or 2 and on the spoons it goes from 4-6. I hope I was of help!
+Joe Ceccon Sure, once you click on it, you must click on the "skip ad" button on the top right corner, it will then take you to my dropbox link. Let me know if you can't even get to that point. It might be possible that your antiadware is blocking it. If that's the case ill send it to you by email or post a different link for you to use.
Playing with 2 players, if i get the most sushi rolls and my player gets none, technically they came last, and second, so do they still get 3 points for coming second?
Hi there Annabel, thanks for dropping by. This is indeed a good question. The game author clarified this on bgg. I'll copy and paste his clarification: "Yes the player with the second most sushi rolls does get 3 points in a 2 player game. However, as usual, they do need to have at least 1 sushi roll card to be counted in the scoring. So if they have no sushi roll cards they get 0 points. In a 2 player game, in a round with only a small amount of sushi roll cards, it can be a viable strategy for one player to take all the sushi rolls, so they score 6 points and their opponent 0!" ¡I hope it helped!
Hi Max. Its been a learning process since day one. This is one of my first videos. I've gained some experience in audio editing since we posted this video and try to edit the audio more thoroughly now. Thanks for the heads up. Much appreciated.
Hello There! You have all the info in our blog post: gamesonboard.eu/index.php/2017/06/13/sushi-go-eng/ Scroll down to the bottom of the page and you'll find the link to the video review where we explain how it works and you'll also find a pdf with an updated double sided version of our scoring cards.
So since you’re the Sushi Go Party sensei😊, can you briefly explain how to play the SPOON card correctly please? I’m getting mixed instructions and none make sense to me.
Could you recommend a really cheap card shuffler for someone who might not play cards games very often? 5:14 I like how you align the cards with the number of points at the bottom when you lay them down. 5+ dumplings gives you 15 points. Why would to take 6 (or more‽) dumplings? The only case I could think of this coming up is if you already have 5 dumplings and the last card you get for the round is also a dumpling so you don't really have a choice. 6:07 It's good that you explicitly describe how you can't move a nigiri on a wasabi, and that you _must_ place the next nigiri you get on the wasabi. If you place down a wasabi near the end of the round and can't get a nigiri, is it worth 0 points? I appreciate you taking the time to include accurate closed captions and detailed instructions for edge cases (getting a tie) that may come up. Are there really 108 cards? I read that on the Amazon page but I'm having trouble seeing that with only 8 card types. I guess it would makes sense for 35 cards (2:32: 7 players times 5 cards) per round and 3 rounds. But do you shuffle the cards from the previous round (minus any desserts) back in to the deck after a round? If so I think I may be missing something because I don't see the need for this many cards. I like the rule of yelling "Sushi Go!" like "Uno!" When do you yell "Sushi Go," when everyone flips over their cards? I like that the chopsticks return to the hand so each hand being passed around will always have the same number of cards. That's a nice strategy with the possible order for playing a nigiri and a wasabi using chopsticks.
Hi! I got my card shuffler at a thrift store. I recommend getting a manual one like this one: www.amazon.com/Manual-Card-Shuffler-Discontinued-manufacturer/dp/B005RBVE84/ref=sr_1_11?s=leisure-sports-games&ie=UTF8&qid=1485207414&sr=1-11&keywords=card+shuffler Just in case you are using plastic sleeves. The sleeves could get stuck and ruin the cards in an automatic shuffler. One other reason to take more dumplings is prevent other players from scoring more points. This is a rule that most people ask while playing, so I thought it was necessary to explain it as well as possible. Part of the nigiri rule I had to clarify online with the game author. Indeed a wasabi that is not used at the end of the game scores 0 points. So don't wait too long or it'll go to waste. I include these detailed rules in my detailed tutorials. I think they are situations that might or might not happen so there is no need to explain them to new players. As long as the game owner knows what to do when it happens, there's no need to give new players an excess of information. Yes there are 108 cards. You do not shuffle back into the deck cards from previous rounds, if you did, it would make it more difficult for the pudding cards to appear in other rounds. This is why there are so many cards, so there are enough cards for games up to 5 players. You yell Sushi Go! when you use the chop stick hability, that is, right before playing a second card from your hand. So you do this before everybody flips over their cards. When I first played the game we weren't told that the chopsticks went back into the deck, and hence at the last hand of the round, some players were left empty handed. So this rule makes a lot of sense to have the same number of cards rolling around.
I'm playing g two player and i just played two cards on the chopsticks I previously played. this ended the game because I had no more cards left while my friend had one card left in her hand. what happens to her card? is it just discarded? what if this happens with more than one person? would I pick up the chopstick and continue to play until my friend runs out of cards as well?
Hello Mary Kate! Thanks for the comment! Remember that when you play the chopsticks, the chopsticks go back to your hands after you place the second card down on the table. So there should never be a case in which there is a player with an extra card. In your game, you should have finished that round with the chopsticks in your hand and your friend with that one card you've mentioned. Then you would have passed the last cards to each other, placed them on the table and both of you would have been empty handed at the same time. I hope this helped!
Quick question: tonight I tried to explain to my friend who played a squid nigiri that they could not then play a wasabi on top of the squid nigiri. That the wasabi can only be combined with the NEXT nigiri card drawn after the wasabi is played. My friend said that it didn't specify in the rule book but I told them that because it said "next nigiri" it needed to be a nigiri played /after/ the wasabi was played. The game did not continue due to this misunderstanding and I don't think we will play it again but I do want to play with other people so can you clarify for me for future reference? Also if you play wasabi do you have to pick the next /available/ nigiri it can you wait and see if a better one comes along? Thank you. And I wish I would've known about your tutorial BEFORE attempting to play with other people. XD it kind of soured the mood of the evening.
Hi there! I'm sorry to hear your game was bummed out. This sort of thing happens all the time when playing boardgames, there's always a conflictive rule or two. The best thing to do is come to a consensus then check back on it at some other point. Although the rule is explained in the second page of the booklet under "Using Wasabi" it was clarified by the game designer in a forum I checked online. Once you have a wasabi in play, the next Nigiri you PLAY, must be played on the wasabi. This does not mean that if the next hand you are given has a nigiri you are forced to play that nigiri. You get to choose what card to play and when but once you've placed a wasabi on a previous turn, the first nigiri you play in a later turn must be played on that wasabi card. For Instance: Turn 1: Play Wasabi Turn 2: (Tempura x2, Dumplingx2, egg nigiri, sashimi) Play Dumpling Turn 3: (Tempura, Dumpling x2, squid nigiri, sashimi) Play squid nigiri on wasabi etc. I hope this helped. Next time you have people come over to play, have them watch our Sushi Go! Express tutorial while you shuffle and prepare the game. It explains the basic rules and you can clarify the rest when necessary. They can blame me instead for any rules they don't understand. XD
Thank you so much for the in depth response. I was honestly confused because I thought the wording was clear that it had to be a nigiri played "AFTER" or "NEXT" and when I tried to make "house rules" (via voting and deciding among ourselves how we'd play with wasabi) the person in question said that they were just done with the game. That it was no longer fun. So yeah... ^^;; I think they were just having a bad night maybe. Anyways I greatly appreciate it~! You're the best!
okay I have another, if I'm playing a maki roll and my friend is not, do I still get the 6 points because I have more than her or and would get 3 because technically she's in second place with zero?
Hey there again! Well, that's a strange case. She played no maki rolls and you played at least one. In that case you would receive 6 points and she would receive 0 points. The rules say "The player with the second most icons scores 3 points" so the player must have at least an icon for that condition to be considered.
So...? Did we get your approval? We do have a shorter version (4'32'') to quickstart new players in case you need it, it has "Express tutorial" in the thumbnail. Thanks for your comment!
@@GamesOnBoard Thanks. Before watching your video, I already figured out how the game worked. I read the manual and played it once. The short version would probably fit me better
This is the best Sushi Go tutorial I've come across. Super simple, and explains all the rules without the shenanigans.
Would love to see more tutorials from you'll, especially Carcassonne.
Thank you very much Regan! If you scroll down our main page you'll find the sections with our English videos. There are more to be posted as soon as I can get to them. We currently have another English tutorial for Dixit, and a section on Mind Puzzling solitaires. Don't forget to subscribe to stay up to date. Carcassonne is definitely on my to-do-list ;)
This tutorial was really appreciated since the "How to play" booklet that comes with the game is very hard to comprehend.
Diogo London yep
I agree. Reading the booklet I was lost.
Picked up this game today, couldn't get my head around the rules via the book provided. This was perfect. Thank you for your efforts! They are greatly appreciated!
Thank you for your message. I hope you have loads of fun. In case you need it, don't forget we have an 'express' version of this tutorial to teach new players how to play.
I feel dumb. There's so much to remember. I not only liked the detail you went into in this video, but also the pace so I could take it in. Thank you!
You are very welcome. This one is for the game owner, we also have the "express" tutorial which is a shorter version to teach new plsyers how to play.
Games where each card type has a different "power" or "action" can be overwhelming at first. What you can do is remove the pudding, the chopsticks and the wasabi cards in your first game or play a test round. You'll get a hang of the mechanics and get used to the other cards. Then play the next game full equip. I've done this with players new to board games and it worked great.
Well done tutorial. I got my copy used really cheaply and I am looking forward to playing it over the holidays
The score card is an excellent idea
Hey Wayne thanks for dropping by and leaving a coment. This is a fantastic game to play at home with the family and kids. Check out our other video on Dixit. That's my all time favorite for family days.
Thank you so much! I am having a Japanese party, and I can't wait to play Sushi GO. The instructions in the box are very vague and hard to understand, and this video helped me comprehend the concept of Sushi GO, and now I'm very confident on how to play! Thank you!
That's fantastic! Thanks for the heads up! Adding Sushi Go! To the party will make it lots of fun. I love the idea of theme dinner parties with theme board games to go with them. In case you haven't tried them, other great japanese style games could be Hanabi and Takenoko.
Enjoy!
Finally someone does justice to explaining chopsticks
Thanks for taking the time to leave us your message. Enjoy!!
DO NOT PILE SHUFFLE! It does not actually randomize the cards, should be used only for counting. Use mass shuffling (6-8 times) for a truly random deck. (Use sleeves if necessary.)
Hi! Thanks for the heads up! I like using a combination of both and combining the piles from the pile shuffling at a random order. You are indeed right, pile shuffling only once is not enough to randomize all the cards.
What a wonderful tutorial. Thanks!
In the rules:
With a chopstick card you can play any 2 sushi cards.
However there are NO SUSHI CARDS in the game. There is no distinction as to whether that means 'sushi go' cards or sushi items: sashimi, nigiri or maki.
The result is I am now in Korea, and there is a huge arguement because the Korean rules specifically state that you can only use a 초밥 / (cho bap) nigiri card and nothing else. Not wasabi, not dumpling, pudding, tempura, maki, or sashimi.
As the original game is English it is frustrating this issue is not directly addressed.
By Sushi cards I believe the author means game cards. There are no restrictions to the cards you can play. The author has made some clarifications on The Board Game Geek forums which is where we got the wasabi and nigiri order rule from.
At times, when publishers in other countries adquire licenses, they are at times allowed to tinker the rules and quite often make translation mistakes. Both could explain what is happening in the korean version. I work translating board games and guarantee you this happens a lot. Source publishers rarely supervise the end product in other countries.
Phil Walker Harding, the author of Sishi Go! is, I belive, Australian, so the game was originally published in. English.
@@GamesOnBoard I gues we'll just play both styles and see which pans out. Thanks for the reply👍✌.
@@gerrade71278 sounds like a good way to go!
Great explanation! Thanks!
Please tell me you are still doing this. Detailed rules explanation, making score cards, interacting in the comments. You are a treasure to have in this hobby! Thank you very much.
:) You have definitely just made my day. Thank you so so much. It is comments like yours that fuels my motivation to keep doing this. I haven't been able to make new videos lately because of work but I will surely continue creating here or at www.gamesonboard.eu Have a great day!
Great tutorial! Thank you!!
+Lucky Ducky you are very welcome!!
Thank you for the tutorial it's easier to follow than the manual I downloaded. 😅
I'm glad it helped! Thank you for leaving us a comment. Greatly appreciate it!
Great video!
Thank you for this tutorial. I was a bit confused on the Chopsticks card, which you confirmed that I was playing right. However, on the Sushi Go! Party, the Chopsticks have different numbers on the bottom right of the card. Do you what these are for or how to play them?
Hi! You are very welcome. Thank you for dropping by and leaving us a comment. In Sushi Go! Party some cards like the spoons, menus, chopsticks... have that number on the bottom right corner. According to the rulebook these are used when various special actions take place during the same turn. The numbers establish the order, from lowest to highest number, in which the cards are resolved. This means that if for example in the same turn a player calls out spoon and another player calls out chopsticks, the player with the chopsticks will resolve their action before the player with the spoon because the number on the chopsticks is either 1 or 2 and on the spoons it goes from 4-6. I hope I was of help!
Games On Board yes you were an excellent help! Thank you once again!
Hey thanks for the video best explanation of the rules :D
+Aserwarth Thank you for the feedback! Don't forget to subscribe if you'd like to get a head notice on our future videos!
Thank you! Very thorough.
+Patrick Krok-Horton you are welcome
The link for the Score Card isn't working. Can u help me on that?
+Joe Ceccon Sure, once you click on it, you must click on the "skip ad" button on the top right corner, it will then take you to my dropbox link. Let me know if you can't even get to that point. It might be possible that your antiadware is blocking it. If that's the case ill send it to you by email or post a different link for you to use.
+Joe Ceccon Try this link as well just in case www.dropbox.com/s/yb89wxvxzrjfho6/Sushi%20Go%20Tarjetas%20v4%20Games%20On%20Board.pdf?dl=0
thank you so much. very helpful
+Chalaine Barry You are very welcome Chalaine! We'll be uploading videos of many more games, you can subscribe if you are interested.
Playing with 2 players, if i get the most sushi rolls and my player gets none, technically they came last, and second, so do they still get 3 points for coming second?
Hi there Annabel, thanks for dropping by. This is indeed a good question. The game author clarified this on bgg. I'll copy and paste his clarification:
"Yes the player with the second most sushi rolls does get 3 points in a 2 player game. However, as usual, they do need to have at least 1 sushi roll card to be counted in the scoring. So if they have no sushi roll cards they get 0 points.
In a 2 player game, in a round with only a small amount of sushi roll cards, it can be a viable strategy for one player to take all the sushi rolls, so they score 6 points and their opponent 0!"
¡I hope it helped!
@@GamesOnBoard thx so much!!
The content of this video is excellent but the volume for the intro is too loud compared to the rest of the video.
Hi Max. Its been a learning process since day one. This is one of my first videos. I've gained some experience in audio editing since we posted this video and try to edit the audio more thoroughly now. Thanks for the heads up. Much appreciated.
Those scoring-cards you've made and are for download..... How to they work? Where and how do you write the points on the card??
Hello There! You have all the info in our blog post: gamesonboard.eu/index.php/2017/06/13/sushi-go-eng/ Scroll down to the bottom of the page and you'll find the link to the video review where we explain how it works and you'll also find a pdf with an updated double sided version of our scoring cards.
Games On Board thanks!!! Missed that video at first. Awesome. Thanks
l0n3wolf89 you are very welcom
So since you’re the Sushi Go Party sensei😊, can you briefly explain how to play the SPOON card correctly please? I’m getting mixed instructions and none make sense to me.
Could you recommend a really cheap card shuffler for someone who might not play cards games very often?
5:14 I like how you align the cards with the number of points at the bottom when you lay them down.
5+ dumplings gives you 15 points. Why would to take 6 (or more‽) dumplings? The only case I could think of this coming up is if you already have 5 dumplings and the last card you get for the round is also a dumpling so you don't really have a choice.
6:07 It's good that you explicitly describe how you can't move a nigiri on a wasabi, and that you _must_ place the next nigiri you get on the wasabi. If you place down a wasabi near the end of the round and can't get a nigiri, is it worth 0 points?
I appreciate you taking the time to include accurate closed captions and detailed instructions for edge cases (getting a tie) that may come up.
Are there really 108 cards? I read that on the Amazon page but I'm having trouble seeing that with only 8 card types. I guess it would makes sense for 35 cards (2:32: 7 players times 5 cards) per round and 3 rounds. But do you shuffle the cards from the previous round (minus any desserts) back in to the deck after a round? If so I think I may be missing something because I don't see the need for this many cards.
I like the rule of yelling "Sushi Go!" like "Uno!" When do you yell "Sushi Go," when everyone flips over their cards? I like that the chopsticks return to the hand so each hand being passed around will always have the same number of cards. That's a nice strategy with the possible order for playing a nigiri and a wasabi using chopsticks.
Hi!
I got my card shuffler at a thrift store. I recommend getting a manual one like this one: www.amazon.com/Manual-Card-Shuffler-Discontinued-manufacturer/dp/B005RBVE84/ref=sr_1_11?s=leisure-sports-games&ie=UTF8&qid=1485207414&sr=1-11&keywords=card+shuffler
Just in case you are using plastic sleeves. The sleeves could get stuck and ruin the cards in an automatic shuffler.
One other reason to take more dumplings is prevent other players from scoring more points.
This is a rule that most people ask while playing, so I thought it was necessary to explain it as well as possible. Part of the nigiri rule I had to clarify online with the game author. Indeed a wasabi that is not used at the end of the game scores 0 points. So don't wait too long or it'll go to waste.
I include these detailed rules in my detailed tutorials. I think they are situations that might or might not happen so there is no need to explain them to new players. As long as the game owner knows what to do when it happens, there's no need to give new players an excess of information.
Yes there are 108 cards. You do not shuffle back into the deck cards from previous rounds, if you did, it would make it more difficult for the pudding cards to appear in other rounds. This is why there are so many cards, so there are enough cards for games up to 5 players.
You yell Sushi Go! when you use the chop stick hability, that is, right before playing a second card from your hand. So you do this before everybody flips over their cards.
When I first played the game we weren't told that the chopsticks went back into the deck, and hence at the last hand of the round, some players were left empty handed. So this rule makes a lot of sense to have the same number of cards rolling around.
Super helpful! thank you lots.
+Jesse Figuera It's a pleasure Jesse. Welcome on board!
Thx bro the other people dun even explain it properly and understandable thx
I'm playing g two player and i just played two cards on the chopsticks I previously played. this ended the game because I had no more cards left while my friend had one card left in her hand. what happens to her card? is it just discarded? what if this happens with more than one person? would I pick up the chopstick and continue to play until my friend runs out of cards as well?
Hello Mary Kate!
Thanks for the comment!
Remember that when you play the chopsticks, the chopsticks go back to your hands after you place the second card down on the table. So there should never be a case in which there is a player with an extra card. In your game, you should have finished that round with the chopsticks in your hand and your friend with that one card you've mentioned. Then you would have passed the last cards to each other, placed them on the table and both of you would have been empty handed at the same time.
I hope this helped!
Quick question: tonight I tried to explain to my friend who played a squid nigiri that they could not then play a wasabi on top of the squid nigiri. That the wasabi can only be combined with the NEXT nigiri card drawn after the wasabi is played. My friend said that it didn't specify in the rule book but I told them that because it said "next nigiri" it needed to be a nigiri played /after/ the wasabi was played. The game did not continue due to this misunderstanding and I don't think we will play it again but I do want to play with other people so can you clarify for me for future reference? Also if you play wasabi do you have to pick the next /available/ nigiri it can you wait and see if a better one comes along? Thank you. And I wish I would've known about your tutorial BEFORE attempting to play with other people. XD it kind of soured the mood of the evening.
Hi there! I'm sorry to hear your game was bummed out. This sort of thing happens all the time when playing boardgames, there's always a conflictive rule or two. The best thing to do is come to a consensus then check back on it at some other point.
Although the rule is explained in the second page of the booklet under "Using Wasabi" it was clarified by the game designer in a forum I checked online. Once you have a wasabi in play, the next Nigiri you PLAY, must be played on the wasabi. This does not mean that if the next hand you are given has a nigiri you are forced to play that nigiri. You get to choose what card to play and when but once you've placed a wasabi on a previous turn, the first nigiri you play in a later turn must be played on that wasabi card.
For Instance:
Turn 1: Play Wasabi
Turn 2: (Tempura x2, Dumplingx2, egg nigiri, sashimi) Play Dumpling
Turn 3: (Tempura, Dumpling x2, squid nigiri, sashimi) Play squid nigiri on wasabi
etc.
I hope this helped. Next time you have people come over to play, have them watch our Sushi Go! Express tutorial while you shuffle and prepare the game. It explains the basic rules and you can clarify the rest when necessary. They can blame me instead for any rules they don't understand. XD
Thank you so much for the in depth response. I was honestly confused because I thought the wording was clear that it had to be a nigiri played "AFTER" or "NEXT" and when I tried to make "house rules" (via voting and deciding among ourselves how we'd play with wasabi) the person in question said that they were just done with the game. That it was no longer fun. So yeah... ^^;; I think they were just having a bad night maybe. Anyways I greatly appreciate it~! You're the best!
Glad I could help!
Oh thank you so much! Instructions came in what we think is Japanese.
okay I have another, if I'm playing a maki roll and my friend is not, do I still get the 6 points because I have more than her or and would get 3 because technically she's in second place with zero?
Hey there again! Well, that's a strange case. She played no maki rolls and you played at least one. In that case you would receive 6 points and she would receive 0 points. The rules say "The player with the second most icons scores
3 points" so the player must have at least an icon for that condition to be considered.
+Games On Board thank you for all your help!! :)
+Mary Kate Whelan You're welcome! Glad to help. Share us with your friends and click the thumbs up to help us out.
I love you explening 😊😊😊
Thank you! 😃
Hi
Hi back!
This video being 11 minutes makes me curious how you can spend over a couple of minutes explaining this game. Let's watch
So...? Did we get your approval? We do have a shorter version (4'32'') to quickstart new players in case you need it, it has "Express tutorial" in the thumbnail. Thanks for your comment!
@@GamesOnBoard Thanks. Before watching your video, I already figured out how the game worked. I read the manual and played it once.
The short version would probably fit me better
Sic po lol