Sequence Game

August 18, 2014 - Comment

It’s fun, it’s challenging, it’s exciting, it’s Sequence. Play a card from your hand, place a chip on a corresponding space on the game board when you have five in a row, it’s a Sequence. Learn to block your opponents – remove their chips. Watch out for the Jacks, they are wild. With a little

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(as of April 20, 2020 2:15 am UTC - Details)

It’s fun, it’s challenging, it’s exciting, it’s Sequence. Play a card from your hand, place a chip on a corresponding space on the game board when you have five in a row, it’s a Sequence. Learn to block your opponents – remove their chips. Watch out for the Jacks, they are wild. With a little strategy and luck, you’ll be a winner. Contents: Folding Game Board, 2 Decks of Sequence Cards, 135 Playing Chips and Instructions. For 2 or more players, ages 7 and up. Country of Origin: USA or Hong Kong or China.With touches of canasta, rummy, and poker, this game could easily become a Friday-night favorite. The object is to get a “sequence,” meaning a row of five poker-like chips on the game board. The board itself depicts lines of face-up playing cards. Players place their “crowning” chips on top of the card pictures, and can form sequences by using strategy and knowing which Sequence cards to keep or discard. Since forethought, luck, and backup plans are the keys to winning, this game is probably too sophisticated for children under 7 years old. (But young ones can team up with adults.) Included are 104 playing cards and 50 crowning chips in each color: red, blue, and green. –Gail Hudson

Product Features

  • Easy enough for children, challenging for adults!
  • Contents: Folding Game Board, Sequence Playing Cards, 135 Sequence Playing Chips, Game Instructions

Comments

Drewster "drewster" says:

Great fun for the whole family! Sequence is one of those rare games that can be played by many people of widely different ages at the same time. A little skill and a lot of luck make this an easy game to learn, but sometimes very tough to win. It’s more of a card game than a board game, so I can see why one reviewer said it requires “no skill,” but I don’t think that’s a reason to “dis” the game: after all, most card games rely more on luck than anything else, don’t they? However, I don’t really think you can call this game “educational” except in the sense that it does help the younger kids learn about the suits and types of playing cards. And so what if it’s not educational? It’s Fun!The game description does not tell you that although 2 to 12 people can play, it must be in multiples of 2 or 3. There are only 3 sets of color chips to play with, and you have to have evenly divided “teams” when you play with more than 3 people. This means that 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 9, 10 or 12 people can play, but not 5, 7 or 11…

Anonymous says:

This is a great game for adults and kids. 0

Anonymous says:

Awesome game, fun for everybody!!!! 0

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