6 Nimmt!

Take 5! / 6 Nimmt!
Designer(s) Wolfgang Kramer
Illustrator(s) Franz Vohwinkel
Publisher(s) Amigo Spiele
Players 2–10
Age range 10+
Setup time ~5 minutes
Playing time 45 minutes

6 Nimmt! / Take 5! is a counting card game designed by Wolfgang Kramer in 1994 and published by Amigo Spiele. The French version is distributed by Gigamic. This game allows 2–10 players who start with ten randomly numbered cards. These are played in simultaneous turns onto four card stacks with the goal of limiting the number of points (in the form of Bulls' Heads distributed among the cards) you're forced to take. Each player attempts to play their cards without laying their 6th card on a stack, as this results in a penalty of collecting all cards in the stack. Each card indicates penalty points with the number of bull heads on top of the card. After any player reaches 66 points the player with the least penalty points wins.

The game is sometimes called 6 who loses!, Take 6!, Category 5, or the original German name. The game can take from 2 to 10 players. The game's suggested minimum age is 10 years, and lasts on average about 45 minutes. The game consists of multiple rounds (typically 3–4) with cumulative scoring, each taking 10–15 minutes. It is possible to just play a single round as self-contained game.

Rules

A typical 6 Nimmt! game

The goal is to be the player with the lowest number of points. To do this, the players should try to get rid of their cards, especially the ones with more cattle heads.

6 Nimmt! is played using a special card deck that in the original version has a cattle head in the center of the card and a variable number of small cattle heads on the top. The cards are numbered 1 to 104, each giving 1, 2, 3, 5 or 7 points (i.e. cattle heads) to the person who picks it up.

In the deck there are:

Preparation

Ten cards are dealt to each player.

Four uncovered cards are arranged on the table to form a vertical line.

Gameplay

At each turn, each player selects a card to play, and puts the card face down on the table. When all the players have selected a card, the cards are uncovered.

Starting with the lowest valued card, and continuing in increasing order, each player must put their card at the end of one of the four rows on the table, following these rules:

The cards of all the players are played following these rules, from the lowest player card to the highest one.

At the end of the turn, the players each select a new card to play; this is repeated for 10 turns until all the cards in the hand are played.

End of the game

After the 10 turns, each player counts the cattle heads on the cards gathered from the table during the round. The score of each player is collected on the paper and a new hand starts.

The game ends when a player collects a total of 66 or more cattle heads. The winner is the player who has collected the fewest cattle heads.

Variations

1. The number of cards depends on the number of players

To make the game more complex, if there are fewer than 10 players, before starting, remove from the deck the cards higher than 10n + 4 (where n is the number of players). E.g. with 5 player you will use only the cards from 1 to 54, excluding the cards from 55 to 104, with 7 player only the cards from 1 to 74 are used. The other rules are unchanged.

This variation is clearly more strategic than the basic rules since it is possible to know which cards has been already played and which one are available to other players.

2. Each player chooses his cards

All cards are placed facing upwards on the table. Starting from a randomly selected player and continuing clockwise each player chooses a card. This continues until each player holds 10 cards. The remaining 4 cards are arranged on the table to form a vertical line. The other rules are unchanged.

3. Younger kids version

This version is for kids who understand bigger/smaller numbers or to teach them the concept.

Teaches kids to count and learn about bigger/smaller numbers. It is purely luck, so kids and adults are equally matched.

References

    External links

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