Table feel
Moderate level of interaction with a mix of direct and strategic confrontation.
Celebrities is a public domain game in which each player writes the names of celebrities (about 8) on pieces of paper or cards, one per piece of paper or card. The names are placed in a container, and players are assigned partners randomly (there must be an even number of players...
Players
4-30
Time
?-?
Age
?+
Weight
1.19
Rating
7.23
Should this hit the table?
Moderate level of interaction with a mix of direct and strategic confrontation.
Teaching signal
High replayability
Highly interactive
Scales well
Deep strategy
Luck-sensitive
Moderate level of interaction with a mix of direct and strategic confrontation.
Celebrities has a high variability gameboard, offering different experiences each time it is played. The presence of expansions adds new content and gameplay elements, enhancing replay value. The game provides deep strategic possibilities and allows players to improve their strategy over time. The player interaction score is average. The game scales well with different numbers of players without compromising its appeal or balance. It is moderately easy to learn, striking a balance between depth and accessibility. Overall, Celebrities has a strong replayability score of 7.8 out of 10.
The game Celebrities has a moderate influence of luck. Random elements like card draws and guessing the correct celebrity can have a notable impact on the game outcome. However, players have substantial ability to mitigate randomness through strategic decisions and planning. The game relies on a balanced mix of luck and strategy, with neither element dominating the outcome.
Overview
Celebrities is a public domain game in which each player writes the names of celebrities (about 8) on pieces of paper or cards, one per piece of paper or card. The names are placed in a container, and players are assigned partners randomly (there must be an even number of players). The first player pulls names out of the container one at a time and tries to get their partner to say the name on the paper by giving whatever clues they like, without saying the actual name on the paper. If their partner get a name right, they keep the paper; everything else goes back in the container. Each player has only 30 seconds. The names are passed to the next person, who repeats the process, and so on, with the names going around the table, and everyone getting chances to give clues and to guess, until all of the names are guessed. Teams score one point for each name guessed. All of the names are put back in the container, and a second round begins. In the second round, the clue giver can give only one word clues for each name (with whatever other sounds or charades they like), and the guesser can guess only once. The round is played similar to the first round in everything else, and the names go back to the container at the end again, for a third round. In the third round, no words at all are allowed for the clue giver; only charades and sounds (humming tunes) is allowed. The team with the highest total score from the three rounds is the winner. The game was packaged commercially as Celebrity and Time's Up! in 1999, and Monikers in 2015. Also known non-commercially as Salad Bowl or Fish Bowl.
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