Revision as of 16:26, 20 March 2017 editSwoophle (talk | contribs)216 edits →One Night Ultimate Werewolf: update app citation, fix access-dates← Previous edit | Revision as of 16:28, 20 March 2017 edit undoSwoophle (talk | contribs)216 editsm →One Night Ultimate Werewolf: sentence was ambiguousNext edit → | ||
Line 101: | Line 101: | ||
| title=One Night Ultimate Werewolf | | title=One Night Ultimate Werewolf | ||
| url=http://beziergames.com/collections/one-night-ultimate-werewolf | | url=http://beziergames.com/collections/one-night-ultimate-werewolf | ||
| access-date=20 February 2017 }}</ref> published by ], shares many similarities with Ultimate Werewolf. The most notable difference between |
| access-date=20 February 2017 }}</ref> published by ], shares many similarities with Ultimate Werewolf. The most notable difference between the two is that in One Night Ultimate Werewolf gameplay develops over a single 'night', with only one round of plot development, voting and elimination.<ref name="boingboing">{{cite web | ||
| title=A beter version of Werewolf | | title=A beter version of Werewolf | ||
| url=http://boingboing.net/2014/06/27/a-better-version-of-werewolf.html | | url=http://boingboing.net/2014/06/27/a-better-version-of-werewolf.html |
Revision as of 16:28, 20 March 2017
Designers | Ted Alspach |
---|---|
Publishers | Bézier Games, Inc. |
Players | 5 to 75 |
Age range | 9 & up |
Skills | Bluffing, Partnership, Social skills, Roleplay, Negotiation, Deduction |
Ultimate Werewolf is a party card game designed by Ted Alspach and published by Bézier Games. It is based on the social game, Werewolf, which is Andrew Plotkin's reinvention of Dimitry Davidoff's 1987 party game, Mafia. The Werewolf game appeared in many forms before Bézier Games published Ultimate Werewolf in 2008.
Gameplay
Ultimate Werewolf can be played with 5 to 75 players of all ages. Each player has an agenda: as a villager, hunt down the werewolves and vampires; as a werewolf or vampire, convince the other villagers that you are innocent, while secretly attacking those same villagers each night. Dozens of special roles are available to help both the villagers and the werewolves achieve their goals. The game has more than forty unique roles, eighteen different scenarios, a set of 78 fully illustrated cards, a moderator score pad to keep track of games, and a comprehensive game guide.
Roles
The many roles of Ultimate Werewolf include:
|
|
The numbers in parentheses after each card name are for balancing purposes, with positive cards tending to help the villagers and negative cards aiding the werewolves. A mix of cards which sum to zero make for a balanced game.
Expansion packs
- Ultimate Werewolf: Classic Movie Monsters
- Ultimate Werewolf: Night Terrors
- Ultimate Werewolf: Artifacts
- Ultimate Werewolf: Urban Legends
- Ultimate Werewolf: Wolfpack
Awards
- 2009 BoardGameGeek Golden Geek Best Party Board Game Nominee
One Night Ultimate Werewolf
One Night Ultimate Werewolf, published by Bézier Games, shares many similarities with Ultimate Werewolf. The most notable difference between the two is that in One Night Ultimate Werewolf gameplay develops over a single 'night', with only one round of plot development, voting and elimination. As such, games are typically time limited to a number of minutes with players opting to play successive, unrelated games. This approach makes individual games shorter, does not exclude players who are eliminated early in the game (as in Ultimate Werewolf) and often prompts faster paced games. On the other hand the shorter games lose the opportunity to develop extended logical reasoning over the longer games of Ultimate Werewolf.
One Night Ultimate Werewolf also provides a smartphone app taking the role of the moderator, available on both iOS and Android platforms. The primary role of the app is to read out the script moderator script, relieving the need for one of the players to take this impartial role, as required in Werewolf.
Editions
Like Werewolf, a number of extension packs exist for One Night Ultimate Werewolf. One Night Ultimate Daybreak, One Night Ultimate Vampire and two bonus packs comprise additional character roles that can be used instead of or in combination with the roles from One Night Ultimate Werewolf. The One Night smartphone app enables players to include roles from any edition in a single game and adjusts the moderator script accordingly.
References
- ^ "Ultimate Werewolf: Ultimate Edition". BoardGameGeek. Retrieved 2 November 2012.
- ^ "Utlimate Werewolf: Ultimate Edition". Bezier Games. Retrieved 2 November 2012.
- Robertson, Margaret (4 February 2010). "Werewolf: How a parlour game became a tech phenomenon". Wired. Retrieved 2 November 2012.
- Plotkin, Andrew. "Werewolf: A Mind Game". Retrieved 2 November 2012.
- Ultimate Werewolf: Official Role Quick Reference Guide (PDF). Ted Alspach and Bezier Games. 2008.
- ^ "Ultimate Werewolf Artifacts Review". The Opinionated Gamers. Retrieved 2 November 2012.
- ^ "One Night Ultimate Werewolf". Retrieved 20 February 2017.
- ^ "A beter version of Werewolf". Retrieved 20 February 2017.
- "Ted Alspach introduces One Night Ultimate Werewolf". Retrieved 20 February 2017.
- ^ "One Night App". Retrieved 20 March 2017.
External links
- Ultimate Werewolf: Deluxe Edition at Bézier Games
- One Night Ultimate Werewolf collection at Bézier Games
- Ultimate Werewolf: Ultimate Edition at BoardGameGeek