| Gamers Alliance
Report
Herb Levy
Winter 2005 US
Some games dare you to risk it all! This generally
brings to mind wargames (when you commit your troops
in a last ditch attempt to turn the tide of battle)
or casino gambling (when you hope and pray that the
right card or roulette number comes up). Yet, the intensity
of this sort of challenge can still be present in a
family game as Aaron Weissblum proved with his charming
Cloud 9. Unfortunately, the game went out of print.
Fortunately, the game is back with some new graphics
and a few tweaks to the basic rules.
The game comes in a smaller, brightly
colored box only a fraction of the size of the original
bookshelf boxed F.X.Schmid edition. This game could
fit into a backpack with no problem and travel well.
Graphically, this version is much more appealing from
the card definitions found on the sides of the game
box to the plastic hot air balloon basket used to hold
player pawns as they rise from cloud to cloud.
We
featured Cloud 9 several years ago. We've run the
original review in this issue so we don't have to go
over the same turf regarding rules and procedures.
The game play is substantially similar but a few differences
have been made.
Pass the Barn cards which enabled the
player committed to sending the balloon higher to shift
that burden to another player are no longer here. In
addition, using a wild card to meet the balloon soaring
requirements is now voluntary. The former eliminates
a degree of unpredictability to the game as you always
KNOW who's on the spot as well as removing the decision
of playing or not playing the card; the latter creates
a decision so basically, it's a wash. Believing that
more is merrier, the winning score for the game has
been raised from 45 to 50 points. The biggest game
change, however, concerns the drawing of additional
cards.
In the old version,
each player drew a new card to add to his hand once
a balloon ride was over. That is still true. But there
was also times (when the score hit the 11, 22 and 33
mark) when the player in last place could draw a bonus
of two cards. We liked that as a balancing mechanism
keeping last place players in the game. But here, those
opportunities for the last place player have been removed.
Fortunately, players can reinstate the original rule
on their own if they so desire.
Cloud
9 is still lighter than air. But it is the
kind of game that brings children and adults to the
same gaming table. As is typical with the Out of the Box
line, the game boasts a high quality production at
a very reasonable price. Like the hot air balloon it
simulates in the game, Cloud 9 soars!
Back to Cloud
9 Reviews page |