| Steven Silver’s
Reviews
Steven Silver
February 2004
USA
Out of the Box Games has taken a series of squiggles
on cardboard and turned it into a game. However,
rather than being a sort of Rorschach test, this is
a game in which a card is drawn and the player has to
use the various squiggles to create a picture of the
item described on the card. Success is defined
when one of the other players guesses what the picture
represents, at which point both the artist and the guesser
receive tokens. At the end of the game, the player
with the most tokens wins.
The game isn’t as straight forward as it seems,
and beginning players may want to flip the timer during
each round of play to allow themselves more time to
figure out what is being “drawn” with the
cards. Otherwise the (brightly colored green) timer
tends to expire a little too quickly.
In addition to simply using the static images to create
pictures, the artist is allowed to manipulate the cards
to make a small moving picture, which often goes a long
way to help the other players figure out what the picture
is supposed to be. This is a particularly important
aspect of the game because in many cases the lines on
the cards can not be made to line up exactly how the
author wants, even with the cards partially overlapping
each other.
The production quality is quite good, with the cards
having a good thickness which does not lend itself to
easy dog-earing, folding or tearing. When the cards
are all spread out, it is not always easy to keep track
of what shapes the artist can play with, however the
back of the instruction card does provide an inventory
of all 72 shape cards and players can glance at the
organized chart to get some idea about which cards are
available and would most likely be able to be incorporated
into an image.
The cards are small enough that spreading them out,
while it takes up space, isn’t prohibitive. The
game can be played on a kitchen table, which allows
plenty of space for the cards and for the artist to
manipulate them into pictures. The game, therefore,
is portable, although the number of pieces (cards, scoring
chips, clue cards, timer, die) makes it one which doesn’t
travel particularly well despite the ergonomic box into
which all the pieces fit.
Because of the way it is played, Squint needs at least
three people in order to be played. More players,
of course, add to the fun. Depending on the number
of players, from three to eight, the game lasts a varying
number of rounds, with a round defined as each player
being the artist once.
Squint is a game which will appeal to those who enjoy
artistic games, such as Pictionary, however the pre-drawn
cards will be a boon to those who enjoy that game, are
creative, but feel they lack the artistic ability to
sketch quickly. The game is
quick and fun and when the artist is unsuccessful
leads to much discussion and Monday
morning quarterbacking of the card.
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