|
Games Unplugged
November 2001 (#13)
Michael Lichucki
P. 30
Advertised as the world's fastest game, BLINK is inappropriately
named. The game is so quick; blinking costs valuable
nanoseconds that may be the difference between winning
and losing. Perhaps that is an exaggeration, but an
entire game of 3 rounds can easily be completed within
10 short minutes.
BLINK is comprised of 60 cards containing various
shapes, colors and numbers. Players divide the deck
in half, drawing three cards into their hand. With a
flip of the card from the remaining decks, the race
is on. Players may place cards from their hand on either
discard deck, one at a time. To play a card on a discard
deck, it must agree with the last card played. Cards
can agree by being the same color, the same number of
symbols regardless of type, or the same symbol. The
winner is the first player to exhaust their deck. With
two decks to play upon and three cards in each player's
hand, the game rarely pauses. There are rules included
to handle situations in which neither player can continue.
BLINK's portability, ease of learning,
and speed are all elements that make BLINK the next
play anywhere game. In test play, there was a
varied demographic that found BLINK to be an enjoyable
time. Young children enjoyed the shapes and colors,
while the grandmother that played the game found it
a nice change of pace from some of the card games that
she played with her friends. Everyone enjoyed the first
several games, but interest quickly waned. In summary,
BLINK is a nice time filler, but lacks substance for
extended playing sessions.
Back
to BLINK Reviews page
|