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Awards

Rating

  • Artwork
  • Complexity
  • Replayability
  • Player Interaction
  • Component Quality

You Might Like

  • Plays up to a massive eight players!
  • Constant player interaction.

Might Not Like

  • Colours and text are hard to read/discern.
  • Best with Five or more players.
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Shadow Hunters Review

Shadow Hunters Review

In the demon world an epic battle rages between the shadows and hunters. There are civilians caught up in the middle who have their own goals. In Shadow Hunters you and your friends will take on these roles in a desperate fight to the death. However, you will have to determine who is on your side and who is the enemy!

Shadow Hunters is a secret role game with a distinct manga/anime feel to it. This is a great high player count game, published by Z-Man Games, which sadly seems to have slipped under a lot of people's radar.

It includes:

  • One Game Board.
  • Two Sets of 10 Character Cards.
  • Six Area Cards.
  • 16 Hermit Cards (green).
  • 16 White Cards.
  • 16 Black Cards.
  • 8 Player Boards.
  • 16 Wooden Pieces (Two in each player colour).
  • One, Six-Sided Dice.
  • One, Four-Sided Dice.
  • Rule Book.

Playing Shadow Hunters

Role cards are distributed in secret to all players and placed face down on their player board. However many players there are, there will always be an equal number of shadows and hunters, the number of civilians will vary. For example in a seven-player game there will be two shadows, two hunters and three civilians, in a six-player game there is two of each faction.

Each player places one of their wooden pieces at zero on the damage track and one in the middle of the board and the game begins. Each character card contains a fair bit of information. The name of your character is at the top, their affiliation is middle left, hit points middle right and their win condition and special ability is at the bottom. You may reveal your identity at the start of a turn in order to use a characters special ability.

Each player's turn consists of three actions:

  1. Move your character (mandatory).
  2. Action on the area card (optional).
  3. Attack other players (optional).

To move your character you roll both dice, add the total and move to the allocated area. If you roll a seven you may move to any area you choose, you must, however, move whenever you roll the dice so roll again if you roll the number you are already on.

You may then take the action on the area card. There are six different area cards, each with a different action. The black, white and green spaces (Cemetery, Church and Hermit's Cave) allow you to draw a card of the same colour (more about cards in a bit). The Underworld Gate allows you to choose a card pile to draw from, The Erstwhile Altar allows you to steal a piece of equipment from another player and finally, The Weird Woods allow you to either deal two points of damage to someone or heal one point of damage.

White and black cards are either single use or equipment that stays face up in front of you.  White cards may be cards that heal damage or help prevent it, whereas black cards generally deal extra damage. Green cards help you identify which side other players are on. Read the card and pass it, face down to another player of your choice who should follow the instructions on it. For example, this card, you would pass to someone, if they took a point of damage they are a hunter, if not they are either a shadow or a civilian.

At the end of your turn, you may attack any player in the same area as you. You simply roll the two dice and deal an amount of damage equal to the difference between the two dice. If the two dice roll the same number your attack is unsuccessful.

Your character dies when they take damage equal or more their health value, when that happens reveal your card, you are out of the game. If any of the win conditions on your card are fulfilled, immediately reveal your card as the winner, it is, however, possible for multiple characters to win the game at the same time.

Final Thoughts

This is a great and pretty simple game, though the role deduction makes it great fun with the right group. The art on it is lovely and the game board and cards have a lovely finish. One major problem with this game is the player pieces, the colours on the boards and tokens just don't match (the pink board has purple tokens) and some of the colours are tough to tell apart (the black and dark blue for example).

That said, Shadow Hunters is a great gem of a game and plays up to eight players, which alone makes it worth having. The accusations and promises that occur during a game make it a great social game too.

 

Zatu Score

Rating

  • Artwork
  • Complexity
  • Replayability
  • Player Interaction
  • Component Quality

You might like

  • Plays up to a massive eight players!
  • Constant player interaction.

Might not like

  • Colours and text are hard to read/discern.
  • Best with Five or more players.

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