Waggle Dance

Waggle Dance

RRP: £29.99
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Build a beehive, collect nectar, and make honey while also being efficient, being strategic, and outmaneuvering your opponents! In Waggle Dance, a Euro-style worker-placement dice game for 2-4, players control worker bees to build their hive, produce more bees, collect nectar, return it to the hive and make honey! (What is a “waggle dance” you ask? It’s a series of…
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Category SKU ZBG-TBG3960 Availability Out of stock
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Awards

Rating

  • Artwork
  • Complexity
  • Replayability
  • Player Interaction
  • Component Quality

You Might Like

  • Fun to play with families.
  • Great artwork.
  • All those dice!

Might Not Like

  • Components are Basic (bar the dice)
  • Player interaction is limited.
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Description

Build a beehive, collect nectar, and make honey while also being efficient, being strategic, and outmaneuvering your opponents!

In Waggle Dance, a Euro-style worker-placement dice game for 2-4, players control worker bees to build their hive, produce more bees, collect nectar, return it to the hive and make honey! (What is a "waggle dance" you ask? It's a series of patterned movements performed by a scouting bee to tell other bees in the colony the direction and distance of a food source or hive site.)

Players need to organize their bees to make as much honey as possible to see the hive through the coming winter. The winner is the first player to successfully create 7 or more honey tokens in their hive. It's up to you how to achieve this: Do you focus on nectar collection, increasing your bee population, expanding your hive, seeking favor with the queen, or splitting your resources to accomplish all of these? Whatever you choose, the natural world is a competitive environment and you can be sure the other players will be looking to maximize their advantage.

Waggle Dance is designed to be a highly accessible language independent game with a simple rule-sheet appealing to all levels of gamers.

  • Ages 10+
  • 2-4 players
  • 30-90 minutes playing time

Waggle Dance got my attention when I was looking at a game called Perfect Crime on Kickstarter. Published by the same company, Grublin Games, and designed by Mike Nudd, Waggle Dance is a worker (dice) placement game for 2-4 players.

It plays is around half hour on the lower player count and just over an hour on the higher one. The idea is to build up your hive and make enough honey to survive the winter…that’s right WINTER IS COMING…

Waggle Dance – Inside the box.

Dice, lots of dice….Waggle Dance is full of basic wooden components that all do their jobs perfectly. There are hexagon (honeycomb) tiles a deck of cards and a good supply of baggies.

The star of the show though is the bag of dice. You get 72 small dice in four player colours – now that’s a lot of dice, all of which are of great quality.

Gameplay

The set up is simple and takes only a few minutes of putting down cards in a pre-determined pattern, giving players their dice, cubes etc of their colour and determining first player. Waggle Dance is played over two phases, Day and Night.

In the day phase, you will roll your dice and what number you roll determines on what card you can place it. The cards have actions that allow you to do things like trade or claim an egg. When a player has placed one bee (die) the other players do this until all bees have been used. The Night phase is then triggered.

In the Night phase, you resolve the actions of all the bees that have been placed. The cards all have letters on them and you resolve the actions in alphabetical order. The main action is to claim nectar This is where if you have an area majority of bees you can claim nectar of that colour and this is then used to make honey which is the way to win the game.

That’s the basics of the game and it’s easy to pick up as you play. There is some strategy involved on how to hatch eggs and make honey etc. One action allows you to draw a ‘queen bee’ card and these give bonus effects in a phase. This adds depth to the game and using this action was used by most players often.

In the day phase, you will roll your dice and what number you roll determines on what card you can place it. The cards have actions that allow you to do things like trade or claim an egg. When a player has placed one bee (die) the other players do this until all bees have been used. The Night phase is then triggered.

In the Night phase, you resolve the actions of all the bees that have been placed. The cards all have letters on them and you resolve the actions in alphabetical order. The main action is to claim nectar This is where if you have an area majority of bees you can claim nectar of that colour and this is then used to make honey which is the way to win the game.

That’s the basics of the game and it’s easy to pick up as you play. There is some strategy involved on how to hatch eggs and make honey etc. One action allows you to draw a ‘queen bee’ card and these give bonus effects in a phase. This adds depth to the game and using this action was used by most players often.

Waggle Dance – Final Thoughts

The game plays very smoothly and at a good pace, players are kept engaged as you must see what actions are left available. This makes forward planning necessary but it’s still easy enough for younger children to play. The Queen Bee cards are the star of the show and these really add player interaction and Take-That elements that would otherwise be missing entirely.

The theme is apparent throughout Waggle Dance and the artwork is good. Component quality as stated above is quite basic but serves a purpose. The cards are of good quality and after a few plays show no signs of wear.

Overall, I enjoy playing Waggle Dance and the fact you can set a point limit means  that it is a game that is adaptable enough to get a game in no matter what time limit you have. Often games that win awards are over hyped but Waggle Dance is not one of them.

Winning UKGE Best Family game of 2015 and a Dice Tower Seal Of Approval is very justified and I would say it’s a great entry level dice placement game for families.

Zatu Score

Rating

  • Artwork
  • Complexity
  • Replayability
  • Player Interaction
  • Component Quality

You might like

  • Fun to play with families.
  • Great artwork.
  • All those dice!

Might not like

  • Components are Basic (bar the dice)
  • Player interaction is limited.