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The Godfather Game is played with a deck of 52 cards, being cash cards, racket cards, "Breaks of the Game" cards, and fingerman cards, one of which is drawn at the start of each player's turn. If a Breaks of the Game card is pulled, a dice is rolled to determine whether the player must take a card from the "Good Break" or the "Bad Break" pile ...
and the contract card is not blocked, then the defending player places a mobster in the queue beside the Against the Wall. If, as a result, the queue exceeds five mobsters, then a Mob War starts. If the active player plays an attack card, and this results in the queue beside the Against the Wall exceeding five mobsters, then a Mob War starts.
The Werewolves of Millers Hollow (French: Les Loups-garous de Thiercelieux, or sometimes only referred as Loups-garous) is a card game created by the French authors Philippe des Pallières and Hervé Marly that can be played with 8 to 47 players. [1] The game is based on the Russian game Mafia. It was nominated for the 2003 Spiel des Jahres award.
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Ultimate Werewolf is a card game designed by Ted Alspach and published by Bézier Games. [2] It is based on the social deduction game, Werewolf, which is Andrew Plotkin's reinvention of Dimitry Davidoff's 1987 game, Mafia. [3] [4] The Werewolf game appeared in many forms before Bézier Games published Ultimate Werewolf in 2008. [2] [1]
Mafia, also known as Werewolf, is a Russian social deduction game created by Dimitry Davidoff in 1986. [2] The game models a conflict between two groups: an informed minority (the mafiosi or the werewolves) and an uninformed majority (the villagers). At the start of the game, each player is secretly assigned a role affiliated with one of these ...
Gangsters is a game for 2–4 players in which players are members of a gang in Prohibition-era Chicago. [1] In order to win, players amass money from extortion and other crimes, then buy properties and bribe cops.
Bang! is a Spaghetti Western-themed social deduction card game designed by Emiliano Sciarra and released by Italian publisher DV Giochi in 2002. In 2004, Bang! won the Origins Award for Best Traditional Card Game of 2003 and Best Graphic Design of a Card Game or Expansion.