About this deal
Spencer bounces around from hobby board game to hobby board game with plenty of Nintendo Switch in the mix. I was thinking a great first-day activity would be to play Green Team Wins with my classes (with makeshift components for all the added players). If you’re reading this thinking “This all sounds awfully familiar” there’s a chance you fall into one of two camps (or both).
The current – and as I understand it from what 25th Century Games say here, all future printings – only supports up to six players.As the person running the game, skipping question after question and sometimes settling for one that resulted in a collective groan, was not an enjoyable experience. There are purple cards (this or that), blue cards (best of three), and yellow cards (fill in the blank). Prompts come in one of three types: Best of Three, where you choose the answer you think is the most popular, This or That, where you pick one of two options, or Fill in the Blank, where you’re given a word and have to fill in the associated word.
I used to assume that most of my readers are from my side of the pond, but things have changed over the last year or two, and now I have twice as many US readers as UK! Some questions are really obvious such as what’s the most disappointing coin (penny, nickel, or dime)? You can change your choices at any time by visiting Cookie preferences, as described in the Cookie notice. There is also a penalty if you are the most recent outcast (only person who wrote a non-matching answer).Sometimes we’ll play a party game and we can tell it will be great with all adults, or all kids, but Green Team Wins is a fantastic multi-generational game, and it really exceeded our expectations in that way. We have family members who are so picky about learning new games and they were obsessed with this game after just one round. His preference is for high interaction games such as dudes on a map, negotiation, social deduction, and party games.