
Lungarno
In Stock
Buy This Product
Description
A game of Merchants and Builders in Old Pisa
In Pisa during the fourteenth century gold rules over all. The great families of the city are the route to success, wealth, and power. Merchant houses compete to make deals with the great families and earn the greatest profits. Meanwhile, master builders erect splendid palaces, marvelous tower houses, beautiful plazas, and fabulous shops, hoping to impress the great families and earn prestige. The center of this quest for wealth and prestige is the Lungarno district, along the banks of the River Arno. Can you overcome your rivals to dominate the Lungarno and become the richest merchant in Pisa?
Overview:
Using tiles, you will build the various districts of Lungarno, sending your merchants to trade with the four great families (represented by shields of different colors). When a district is complete, you will earn profits for your merchants, based on the prestige of the families in that district.
At the end of the game, the player with the most gold is the winner!
Components:
- 13 Special board pieces
- 65 Building tiles
- 55 Florin coins (20 yellow - worth 5 and 35 Grey)
- 25 Merchants (5 of each color)
- 12 Privilege tokens
- Rulebook
Expanded by:
This is the second game by Michele Mura (the first was the card game Easy School).
It was showed for the first time during Play 2008 in Modena (Italy) and then was presented officially during Essen 2008 at Red Glove booth where it spent some time in the first five positions of FairPlay list.
The game has been choosen for the Italian Masters 2010 and the BoardGames League
It's currently distribuited in the following countries:
Italy, US, Holland, France, Belgium, Germany and many others.
Games Magazine Awards Best Family Strategy Nominee, 2010
Extra Info
- Ages: 8 and up
- Artist: Studio Mattigatti
- BGID: 35801
- Category: Economic, Renaissance
- Designer: Michele Mura
- Mechanics: Tile Placement
- Publisher: ElfinWerks, Mario Truant Verlag, Quined White Goblin Games, Red Glove
- Time: 45 minutes
- Year: 2008